A VINTAGE ORIGINAL PHOTO FROM 1937 MEASURING 5X7 INCHES OF NEWLY ELECTED PRESIDENT OF FINLAND KYOSTI KALLIO


Kyösti Kallio was a Finnish politician of the Agrarian League who served as the fourth President of Finland from 1937–1940. He was a prominent leader of the Agrarian League, and served as Prime Minister four times and Speaker of the Parliament six times.






Kyösti Kallio (Finnish pronunciation: [ˈkyø̯sti ˈkɑlːio]; 10 April 1873 – 19 December 1940) was a Finnish politician of the Agrarian League who served as the fourth President of Finland from 1937–1940. He was a prominent leader of the Agrarian League, and served as Prime Minister four times and Speaker of the Parliament six times.[3][4]


Contents
1 Biography
1.1 Early life
1.2 Start of career
1.3 Finland gains independence
1.4 Civil war
1.5 Formation of the republic
1.6 Supported prohibition
1.7 Non-violent anti-communist
1.8 President
1.9 Resignation and death
2 Religious views
3 Cabinets
4 Honours
4.1 Awards and decorations
5 References
6 External links
Biography
Early life
Kyösti Kallio, originally Gustaf Kalliokangas (forename's Swedish pronunciation: [ˈɡɵ̂sːtav], surname's Finnish pronunciation: [ˈkɑlːioˌkɑŋːɑs]), was born in Ylivieska, Grand Duchy of Finland, which was an autonomous region of the Russian Empire at the time. His father was a farmer and a prominent local politician. Kyösti Kallio was educated in Oulu where he became acquainted with Santeri Alkio, author and future ideologue of the Agrarian League.

Start of career
Kallio entered into politics during the first Russification campaign of Finland as a member of the Young Finnish Party. He served in the Diet of Finland 1904–1906 as a member of the Estate of the Peasantry. He joined the newly founded Agrarian League in 1906 and became one of its most prominent leaders.

Finland gains independence
After the February Revolution of 1917 dethroned Tsar Nicholas II, the Russian provisional government tasked Vice Admiral Adrian Nepenin with overseeing the change of government in Finland. Nepenin started by inviting a handful of Finnish politicians to discuss the situation on March 17. Kallio represented the Agrarian League, and when the Finnish politicians the next day sent a delegation to Saint Petersburg to negotiate a cessation to the Russification campaign, Kallio was again a member. The delegation was successful, and Finland was permitted to assemble a fully parliamentary Senate. Kallio came to serve as Agrarian minister in the Senate of Oskari Tokoi, which took office March 26. Most of his time was spent trying to mediate the agrarian strikes and finding foodstuffs for the country, while the First World War raised the prices in Europe.

After the Tsar had been dethroned, the Finnish Parliament had to decide whether the highest authority in the country had passed on to the Russian Provisional Government, the Finnish Parliament or the Finnish Senate. The question led to serious strife between the right-wing and the left-wing elements of the Parliament. Kallio initially supported the socialists in demanding said power to the Parliament, but disapproved of their cooperation with Russian Bolsheviks and Mensheviks, and ultimately voted against the bill they had drafted. Nonetheless, the socialist proposal passed, which the Russian Provisional Government saw as an affront to their power, and Alexander Kerensky consequently dissolved the Parliament on September 8. Kallio and the Socialist Senators resigned from the Senate, which continued to operate under the leadership of E. N. Setälä.

After the October Revolution the bourgeoisie were willing to compromise and give the Parliament the highest authority fearing Bolshevik rule would spread to Finland. Setälä's Senate resigned immediately after the question was settled. Kallio was again named Agrarian Minister in the Senate of P. E. Svinhufvud whose first priority was to declare Finland independent. On December 4 the Senate introduced a declaration of independence to the Parliament, and the next day Kallio wrote a resolution, which the Parliament passed with votes 100–88.

Civil war
During the Civil War in Finland, Kallio hid in Red-dominated Helsinki, because he was at least nominally on the White side and therefore a "class enemy"; he formed a new senate (government) in Helsinki after German troops had defeated the Reds in the city. Afterwards he became a moderate peace-maker and disapproved of retaliation against the Reds.

Formation of the republic
During the debates over the form of the new state in 1918, Kallio resigned from the Senate because he supported a republic instead of constitutional monarchy. Eventually, the monarchist stand lost and he returned to the Cabinet to become Prime Minister. He was a reformist who emphasized education, settlement, and land reform. His greatest achievement was "Lex Kallio" in 1922, legislation allowing the state to buy land to encourage new settlements, and to let the former tenant farmers and other landless rural people buy small farms (see, for example, Seppo Zetterberg et al., ed., "Suomen historian pikkujättiläinen").

Supported prohibition
He supported Prohibition in Finland, and was dismayed when it was repealed in 1932.

Non-violent anti-communist
Kallio was an anti-communist, suppressing the Finnish Communist Party (SKP) in 1923, but he resorted to legislative methods. When the violent right-wing Lapua Movement asked him to become their leader, he refused and was then instead subjected to their death threats.

President

Kallio speaking on the radio in 1930s.
Kallio was elected president with the votes of a centrist (Agrarian and Progressive) and social democratic coalition, which wanted to ensure that President Svinhufvud would not be re-elected. Kallio took the role of a parliamentarian president and avoided use of his personal power.


Kallio in his office

Monument in Helsinki
On the eve of the Winter War, when Marshal Mannerheim once again threatened to resign from his post as chairman of Finland's Defence Council due to a schism with the cabinet, Kallio convinced him to stay. During the war Kallio resisted the idea of giving up any territory to the Soviet Union, but was forced to agree to sign the Moscow Peace Treaty in 1940. His health begun to fail – his right arm was paralyzed – and he was not active in the dealings with Germany leading to the Continuation War. On 27 August Kallio suffered a serious stroke.[5] Prime Minister Risto Ryti took over his duties. Kallio's heart became weak while he knowingly took risks by agreeing to the formal farewell ceremonies.[6][7]

Resignation and death

Kallio together with Mannerheim at the Helsinki railway station on December 19, 1940. Kallio had a fatal heart attack a few seconds after this photograph was taken by Hugo Sundström.
Kallio left a notice of resignation on 27 November 1940. He was planning to leave the capital and retire to his farm at Nivala after the farewell ceremonies on the evening of 19 December 1940; but he collapsed and died that night at the Helsinki Central Railway Station in the arms of his adjutant before a guard of honour while a band played the patriotic Finnish march Porilaisten marssi.[8][9]

Religious views
A significant part of Kallio's personality and a motive for the social reforms which he supported and promoted was his deep Christian faith, which he had adopted already at home, and which was deepened during his marriage to Kaisa Kallio, who was also a devout Christian. Although Kallio was often too busy to go to church, he prayed often when encountering difficulties in making political decisions, and some of these prayers he recorded in his diary. He also read Christian books with his wife and often discussed them by exchanging letters. He often referred to God in his speeches, and during the Winter War he asked the Finns who were serving their country to read the Bible. When he was forced to sign the harsh Moscow Peace Treaty in March 1940, Kallio quoted freely from the Book of Zechariah, saying: "May my hand, which is forced to sign such a paper, wither." His right arm was paralysed the following summer, and he was forced to switch his writing hand. In the Presidential Palace, shortly before leaving for Helsinki Central Railway Station for the last time, Kallio sang a hymn with his family.[6][10][11][citation needed]

Cabinets
Kallio I Cabinet
Kallio II Cabinet
Kallio III Cabinet
Kallio IV Cabinet
Kyösti Kallio
Kyösti Kallio Coat of Arms.svg
Armiger Kyösti Kallio
Honours
Awards and decorations
Finland Grand Cross of the Order of the White Rose (Finland)
Finland Grand Cross of the Order of the Cross of Liberty
Sweden Knight of the Order of the Seraphim (Sweden)
Sweden Order of the Polar Star (Sweden)
Iceland Order of Falcon (Iceland)
Estonia Collar of the Order of the White Star
Estonia Cross of Liberty Military Leadership (Estonia)
Estonia Cross of Liberty Civilian Service (Estonia)
Estonia Order of the Cross of the Eagle
Estonia Order of the Estonian Red Cross
Latvia Order of Three Stars (Latvia)
Kingdom of Hungary (1920–1946) Order of Merit (Hungary)
Poland Order of Polonia Restituta
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kyösti Kallio.
 Courtesy title in Finland for former Presidents of the Republic
 "Governments in chronological order". Finnish government (Valtioneuvosto). Retrieved 27 March 2017.
 "Ministerikortisto". Valtioneuvosto. Archived from the original on 2009-05-03.
 "Edustajamatrikkeli". Eduskunta. Archived from the original on 2012-02-12.
 Sakari Virkkunen, Suomen presidentit II: Kallio - Ryti - Mannerheim ("Finnish Presidents II: Kallio - Ryti - Mannerheim"), Helsinki: Otava Publishing Ltd., 1994
 Virkkunen, "The Finnish Presidents II"
 Kari Hokkanen, "A Biography of Kyösti Kallio, II: 1930-1940" 1930-1940, Helsinki 1986
 Aladár Paasonen (1974). Marsalkan tiedustelupäällikkönä ja hallituksen asiamiehenä (Marshall's chief of intelligence and Government's official. In Finnish). Weilin, Göös, Helsinki
 Kari Hokkanen. "Kallio, Kyösti (1873 - 1940) President of Finland". Biografiakeskus, Suomalaisen Kirjallisuuden Seura. Retrieved 2013-01-10.
 Hokkanen, "A Biography of Kyösti Kallio, II"; "The Presidents of the Republic 1931-1940". Helsinki, 1994
 Kyösti Kallion puheet (Speeches of Kyösti Kallio, in Finnish) Helsinki, 1941
External links
Newspaper clippings about Kyösti Kallio in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
Political offices
Preceded by
Lauri Kristian Relander Speaker of the Parliament of Finland
1920 Succeeded by
Wäinö Wuolijoki
Preceded by
Wäinö Wuolijoki Speaker of the Parliament of Finland
1922 Succeeded by
Wäinö Wuolijoki
Preceded by
Aimo Cajander Prime Minister of Finland
1922–1924 Succeeded by
Aimo Cajander
Preceded by
Paavo Virkkunen Speaker of the Parliament of Finland
1924-1925 Succeeded by
Wäinö Wuolijoki
Preceded by
Antti Tulenheimo Prime Minister of Finland
1925–1926 Succeeded by
Väinö Tanner
Preceded by
Paavo Virkkunen Speaker of the Parliament of Finland
1927 Succeeded by
Paavo Virkkunen
Preceded by
Paavo Virkkunen Speaker of the Parliament of Finland
1929 Succeeded by
Paavo Virkkunen
Preceded by
Oskari Mantere Prime Minister of Finland
1929–1930 Succeeded by
Pehr Evind Svinhufvud
Preceded by
Juho Sunila Speaker of the Parliament of Finland
1930-1936 Succeeded by
Väinö Hakkila
Preceded by
Toivo Mikael Kivimäki Prime Minister of Finland
1936–1937 Succeeded by
Aimo Cajander
Preceded by
Pehr Evind Svinhufvud President of Finland
1937–1940 Succeeded by
Risto Ryti


yösti Kallio was born on 10 April 1873 in Ylivieska. He was the third of twelve children of Mikko Kallio and Beata Knuutila. He came from a well-off and enlightened farming family. From the age of 12 Kyösti was raised by his father’s childless cousin Anttuuna Kangas, who was also raised on a large farm. His stepmother sent him to school, first in Raahe and then, in 1890, to Oulu. Although he failed to graduate from upper secondary school, this did not stop him from educating himself in other ways.

President Kallio’s family farm Heikkilä in Nivala. <em>Pietinen, Nivala 1937. National Board of Antiquities, Historical Picture Collection</em>President Kallio’s family farm Heikkilä in Nivala.
PIETINEN, NIVALA 1937. NATIONAL BOARD OF ANTIQUITIES, HISTORICAL PICTURE COLLECTION
President Kallio with his son Veikko in the garden of his family farm Heikkilä in 1937. <em>Pietinen, Nivala 1937. National Board of Antiquities, Historical Picture Collection</em>President Kallio with his son Veikko in the garden of his family farm Heikkilä in 1937.
PIETINEN, NIVALA 1937. NATIONAL BOARD OF ANTIQUITIES, HISTORICAL PICTURE COLLECTION
Anttuuna Kangas purchased two farms in Nivala to form one big farm, Heikkilä-Mehtälä. Kyösti became the head of the farm, even though ownership transferred to him only gradually. He acquired additional land in Nivala and Haapavesi while also reclaiming land from marshland. Heikkilä became a model farm and an early adopter of mechanisation and new farming methods. The farm’s large forest holdings were also profitable. Kyösti participated actively in all the tasks on his farm, including both manual and supervisory tasks. When he eventually sold the farm in 1939, it boasted 250 hectares of arable land.

Kyösti Kallio was known for his sincere uprightness, honest feedback and opinions, and objectivity. He had the rare ability to earn the trust of his fellow citizens. Honest, sober and always thinking about the best for those near to him and the rural population, Kallio became active in society from an early age. Already during his years at grammar school in Oulu, Kallio had adopted a constitutionalist, pro-Finnish outlook that was strengthened and broadened by his participation in the youth club movement. He was also a leading figure in local politics in Nivala. In connection with the youth club movement, Kallio became acquainted with the writer Santeri Alkio (1862–1930), who later became his most important partner in politics. At the Nivala Youth Club he met Kaisa Nivala, the educated daughter of the local farmer. They were married in 1902 and had six children: two sons and four daughters.

POLITICAL CAREER
In 1904 Kyösti was elected to the Diet of Finland as a member of the Estate of the Peasantry, elevating from local politics to national prominence. The first period of Russification turned Kallio into an active Young Finnish (Nuorsuomalainen) politician. He was active in the Kagal, a secret resistance movement, in opposition to conscription by the Russian Army. The Diet of Finland was dominated by constitutionalists, as a member of whom Kallio held important elected positions. During the parliamentary reforms Kallio advocated women’s suffrage and a voting age of 21 while opposing the limitation of voting rights on the grounds of poverty.

The parliamentary reforms led to universal suffrage, which transformed party politics in Finland. Kallio’s farming background prompted him to change parties. When the Agrarian Party was founded in 1906, Kallio was elected to its governing body. However, in the parliamentary elections of 1907, he was a candidate of both the Agrarian Party and the Young Finnish Party. As his grouping, he chose the Agrarian Party on the grounds that the Young Finns were indifferent to rural issues.

Kallio played a key role in the Finnish independence movement. He was chairman of the Agriculture Subdepartment (i.e. Minister of Agriculture) in three Senates. As a mediator in the agriculture strikes of spring 1917 and as a rationing administrator when food shortages became acute, he learned to see both sides of a question. Although Kallio sternly condemned the Reds’ acts of violence and was forced to go into hiding, in fear for his life, in Red-controlled Helsinki during the Civil War, he did not lose his composure. Immediately after the end of the war, he began demanding that there should be no summary acts of revenge. His speech at Nivala Church on 5 May 1918 attracted much attention, as he became the first well-known White politician to demand that work should start immediately on building a Finland in which “there are no Reds and Whites but only Finns who love their fatherland, citizens of the Republic of Finland who all feel themselves to be members of society and who are at home here”.

Kallio concentrated in particular on land reform, including the liberation of crofters and the promotion of settlement. The law on the redemption of rented areas, i.e. the “Crofters Act”, was passed on 15 October 1918 based largely on Kallio’s preparatory work. As Minister of Agriculture in 1921 Kallio began preparatory work also on the settlement law, which became known as “Lex Kallio”. This legislation allowed the state to buy land to encourage new settlements and to let the former tenant farmers and other landless rural people buy small farms. After the Agrarian Party won the parliamentary elections in 1922, Lex Kallio was enacted despite heavy opposition from the Right. These two laws had an enormous effect on unifying the nation, which would prove vital in motivating the Finnish people to defend their land during the Winter War and Continuation War.

Kyösti Kallio in the early 1920s. <em>Atelier Rembrandt, Helsinki. National Board of Antiquities, Historical Picture Collection</em>Kyösti Kallio in the early 1920s.
ATELIER REMBRANDT, HELSINKI. NATIONAL BOARD OF ANTIQUITIES, HISTORICAL PICTURE COLLECTION
Opening session of Parliament in Heimola in 1929 with Speaker of the House Kyösti Kallio in the centre. <em>Korttikeskus, Helsinki 1929. National Board of Antiquities, Historical Picture Collection</em>Opening session of Parliament in Heimola in 1929 with Speaker of the House Kyösti Kallio in the centre.
KORTTIKESKUS, HELSINKI 1929. NATIONAL BOARD OF ANTIQUITIES, HISTORICAL PICTURE COLLECTION
Kyösti Kallio matured into a reliable and principled long-term politician whose political mission was to strengthen Finnish independence by integrating society through economic and social equality. He was a member of Parliament for 41 years and served as Speaker of Parliament 15 times, as Minister of Agriculture three times, as Prime Minister four times, and also as Minister of Defence and Minister of Transportation.

PRESIDENT
Kyösti Kallio was elected the 4th President of the Republic of Finland in 1937 with the votes of a centrist (Agrarian and Progressive) and social democratic coalition. As president, Kallio was able to realise the goals of his long political career, in particular that of social reconciliation and integration. Kallio also emphasised his goal of integration by travelling extensively throughout the country to meet the public. His wife Kaisa Kallio often accompanied him on these trips, and the Kallios soon became a popular and respected presidential couple.

President Kallio at his desk. <em>Aarne Pietinen, 1937–1940. National Board of Antiquities, Historical Picture Collection</em>President Kallio at his desk.
AARNE PIETINEN, 1937–1940. NATIONAL BOARD OF ANTIQUITIES, HISTORICAL PICTURE COLLECTION
President Kyösti Kallio and Mrs Kaisa Kallio at the Presidential Palace 1939. <em>Thérèse Bonney, Helsinki 1939. National Board of Antiquities, Historical Picture Collection</em>President Kyösti Kallio and Mrs Kaisa Kallio at the Presidential Palace 1939.
THÉRÈSE BONNEY, HELSINKI 1939. NATIONAL BOARD OF ANTIQUITIES, HISTORICAL PICTURE COLLECTION
President Kyösti Kallio and Mannerheim viewing a military parade from the steps of Helsinki Cathedral. <em>Unknown photographer, Helsinki 1938. Finnish Museum of Photography/Alma Media/Uusi Suomi Collection</em>President Kyösti Kallio and Mannerheim viewing a military parade from the steps of Helsinki Cathedral.
UNKNOWN PHOTOGRAPHER, HELSINKI 1938. FINNISH MUSEUM OF PHOTOGRAPHY/ALMA MEDIA/UUSI SUOMI COLLECTION
Kallio’s foreign policy was always moderate. As president, he supported Nordic cooperation and an improvement of relations with the Soviet Union while responding negatively to Hitler’s Germany. His only foreign visits as president were to Sweden in 1938 and 1939, during which he unsuccessfully sought assistance from the other Nordic countries for the coming war. The only official state visit to Finland during his presidency was that of the President of Estonia Konstantin Päts in 1937.

During the Winter War (30 November 1939–3 March 1940) Kallio served as a morale booster and moral backbone of the nation. When he signed the document giving the Moscow peace negotiators authority to accept the terms of the treaty ending the Winter War, the tormented president uttered the well-known words: “May the hand wither which is forced to sign such a paper!” Some six months later his right hand was paralysed.

Meeting of the Nordic heads of state in Stockholm in October 1939. From left to right: President Kallio, King Haakon VII of Norway, King Gustaf V of Sweden and King Christian X of Denmark. <em>Stockholm 1939. National Board of Antiquities, Historical Picture Collection</em>Meeting of the Nordic heads of state in Stockholm in October 1939. From left to right: President Kallio, King Haakon VII of Norway, King Gustaf V of Sweden and King Christian X of Denmark.
STOCKHOLM 1939. NATIONAL BOARD OF ANTIQUITIES, HISTORICAL PICTURE COLLECTION
After resigning due to failing health, Kyösti Kallio and Mrs Kaisa Kallio leave the Presidential Palace on 19 December 1940. <em>E.J. Viitasalo. Helsinki City Museum</em>After resigning due to failing health, Kyösti Kallio and Mrs Kaisa Kallio leave the Presidential Palace on 19 December 1940.
E.J. VIITASALO. HELSINKI CITY MUSEUM
Following the Winter War, Kallio concentrated on raising the morale of a nation depressed by wartime sacrifices and harsh peace terms. Immediately after peace was concluded he made a broadcast speech in which he urged the Finnish people to combine forces in the work of reconstruction. The president emphasised in particular the need for a fair solution to the situation of the 420,000 Karelian evacuees. He set a personal example by handing over some of his own land for their resettlement.

Kallio resigned on 27 November 1940 after his health had begun to fail. After parliament had unanimously elected Risto Ryti as his successor, Kallio made preparations to leave for Nivala to recuperate and spend his retirement there. His heart was irreparably weakened, however, and he could not cope with the touching farewell ceremonies on 19 December. He succumbed to heart failure, dying in the arms of his adjutant Aladár Paasonen in front of a guard of honour while the band played the March of the Pori Regiment (Porilaisten marssi), the honorary march of the Finnish Defence Forces. It is no exaggeration to speak of the Winter War’s most distinguished fallen hero.

President Kallio’s grave in the Nivala church cemetery. <em>Johanna Järvenpää</em>President Kallio’s grave in the Nivala church cemetery.
JOHANNA JÄRVENPÄÄ
Kyösti Kallio is buried in the cemetery of Nivala Church.

Kyösti Kallio was a politician with a long-term vision. The central idea underlying his actions was to strengthen independence by integrating society through economic and social equality. The achievements of his career came especially in the periods of peaceful development when his tenacity and purposefully conciliatory attitude really came into their own. As president at the time of the Winter War, Kallio contributed in particular to maintaining and strengthening the nation's morale; the shaky state of his health to a large extent kept him out of political decision-making.

In 1937 Kyösti Kallio was elected as the fourth president of the Republic of Finland by the votes of the non-socialist Agrarian (Centre) Party and the Social Democrats. His election was the climax of a long life in politics and symbolised the process of internal integration that Finland had undergone since gaining independence. For the future of the country as a nation, the consensus born during the chaos of an incipient world war was a decisive factor. The central idea underlying Kallio's actions throughout his long political career had been to strengthen independence by integrating society through economic and social equality. As the most important means to this end, Kallio viewed land reform and settlement policy and the promotion of Finnish-language culture and education.

On the way to becoming a peasant politician

Kallio grew naturally into the role of a politician. His father was one of the municipal leaders in Ylivieska, and Kyösti gained practical familiarity with local self-government from childhood onwards. From 1895 onwards, in his new home district of Nivala, Kallio's higher level of education and his position as the owner of a large farm led to his being given community duties; he enjoyed these and was good at them, and he quickly came to occupy the most important local positions of trust. He contributed to almost all aspects of a rural community: business (especially cooperatives), municipal and parish administration and cultural and educational ventures, the most important of which was a youth club.

Already during his years at grammar school in Oulu, Kallio had adopted a constitutionalist, pro-Finnish outlook, and this was strengthened and broadened by his youth-club and cooperative work. The person who most influenced him during his school days was Mauno Rosendahl (1848 - 1917), the principal of Oulu's Finnish-language grammar school and a constitutionalist Pietist leader. During his youth-club work, Kallio became acquainted with the writer Santeri Alkio (1862 - 1930), who was later his most important partner in politics. The first period of russification turned Kallio into an active Young Finnish (Nuorsuomalainen) politician. He was elected to the Estate of Peasants as the representative of the Piippola judicial district for the last two sessions of the Diet of Estates in 1904 - 06.

Kallio was a farmer, a peasant. As the son of a fairly large farm, he became familiar with and enjoyed all the tasks that a farmer had to perform, and he engaged in physical labour until an advanced age. The attempts of his wealthy foster-mother Anttuna Kangas (1842 - 1919) to make him into a merchant or civil servant failed because of his poor performance at school and his unwillingness; but all the greater was the enthusiasm and success that he displayed when he got his hands on the reins of a large farm. Heikkilä-Mehtälä was the largest farm in northern Finland; when Kallio parted with it in 1939, it had about 250 hectares of arable land, most of it former marshland that Kallio had had reclaimed himself. Improving the living conditions of farmers and rural people in general was thus the idea which - both as an intrinsic and an instrumental value - underpinned Kallio's political career.

It was his peasant background that prompted Kallio to change parties. The universal suffrage brought by the parliamentary reform of 1905 caused an upheaval in Finland's party landscape. When the Agrarian Party (originally called the Suomen Maalaisväestön Liitto - SML - and later the Maalaisliitto) was founded in 1906, Kallio was elected to its governing body. However, in the parliamentary elections of 1907, he was a candidate of both the SML and the Young Finnish Party. As his grouping, he chose the SML, on the grounds that the Young Finns were indifferent to rural issues.

Alongside Santeri Alkio, Kallio became the young party's most important leader: chairman from 1908 to 1916, first minister in 1917, and prime minister in 1922. Both during his time as chairman and later as well, Kallio had a great influence on the Agrarian Party's platforms and on the formulation of practical policies. He laid stress on a matter-of-fact and moderate approach and shunned both the 'gentry-hating' and 'anticulturalist' traits characteristic of the young party and a one-sided class-agrarianism.

Kallio in the history of Finland's independence struggle

Kallio played a key role in Finland's achievement of independence. He was chairman of the Agriculture Subdepartment (i.e. minister of agriculture) first in Oskari Tokoi's Senate and then in those of Svinhufvud and Paasikivi. His actions were marked by moderation and a conciliatory attitude both before and after the war of liberation/civil war. As a mediator in the agriculture strikes of spring 1917 in the manor-house regions of southern Finland and as a rationing administrator when food shortages became acute, he learned to see both sides of a question.

Although Kallio sternly condemned the Reds' acts of violence and during the uprising was forced to hide, in fear for his life, in Red-controlled Helsinki, he did not lose his composure, and immediately after the end of the war, he began demanding that there should be no summary acts of revenge. His speech at Nivala Church on 5 May 1918 attracted much attention, as he became the first well-known White politician to demand that work should start immediately on building a Finland in which "there are no Reds and Whites but only Finns who love their fatherland, citizens of the Republic of Finland who all feel themselves to be members of society and who are at home here".

When legal power was restored, Kallio returned to government activities, which were dominated by a constitutional struggle. As an Agrarian Party member, Kallio was a republican, but a moderate one and also prepared to compromise. When Paasikivi's Senate held to its unbending monarchist policy, Kallio resigned from it on 17 August 1918. During the autumn, he made many appearances as an advocate of a republic at public meetings around the country.

Leading centrist politician

In the 1919 elections, in which the issue of the form of government was the main topic, the Agrarian Party became the largest non-socialist party. Its most experienced politician was Kallio, whose status was highlighted when Alkio became weary and retired from parliament in 1922. This contributed to the Agrarian Party's willingness to participate in governments. Kallio became one of the most important wielders of power in the 'first republic'; he was, for example, prime minister four times and a long-standing speaker of parliament.

Kallio concentrated in particular on land policy, the liberation of crofters and the promotion of settlement. He had become familiar before his time as a minister with the problems of tenant farmers when he served on a party committee, and he had constantly initiated proposals in parliament aimed at transforming rented farms into independent properties. Kallio made the settling of the land-rent issue a condition of his participation in Tokoi's Senate. The drafting of a bill for the liberation of tenant farmers was not completed until right on the eve of war; Senator Kallio presented it in parliament on 21 January 1918. A law on the redemption of rented areas was finally passed on 15 October 1918. After this, Kallio began to push for the improvement of other aspects of rural life. The settlement law, known as the Lex Kallio, enacted in 1922 after a long and passionate battle with the rightists, is one of the most famous laws in the history of post-independence Finland.

With his land policy, Kallio aimed both at increasing production and, in particular, at enhancing the stability of society. With the same goal in mind, he worked persistently on behalf of 'Finnishness' (suomalaisuus), defence and the infrastructure of agriculture and rural areas - roads, railways and electrification.

Kallio was a centrist politician, a conciliatory maker of compromises. He shunned the producer-agrarianism that gained strength in the Agrarian Party during the 1920s; the leader of this trend, Juho Sunila (1875 - 1936) was his keen and occasionally successful rival, especially when Kallio's relations with President Lauri Relander, a member of the Agrarian Party, were bad. Kallio described his own orientation within the party as "social". In the late 1920s, he even thought of quitting politics and becoming a provincial governor; the president enthusiastically offered him the opportunity.

Between communism and fascism

Kallio always actively opposed communism, which he regarded as dangerous and criminal. His first government smashed the organisation of the Communist Party of Finland (Suomen Kommunistinen Puolue - SKP) in 1923 with what was called the 'Kallio [surgical] operation'. Afterwards, too, Kallio favoured smothering communism by legislative means. When the Great Depression began in 1929, the communists, who were directed from Moscow, intensified their activities and organised a large-scale strike movement. Kallio's third government drafted anticommunist legislation but was taken by surprise by popular reaction from the right. The Lapua movement began. Kallio initially showed understanding for it, but he and his government began to be the target of increasing attacks after he had condemned the movement's violent methods.

Kallio was repeatedly asked to become leader of the Lapua movement - even dictator - but as a convinced democrat he refused. He was one of the movement's most hated opponents, and he was threatened with both death and kidnapping and dumping over the Soviet border. Pressure from the Right, which was supported by President Relander, forced Kallio's government to resign on 2 July 1930; the new government was formed by Svinhufvud.

Kallio was indeed re-elected to parliament after it had been dissolved, and he was even the Agrarian Party's candidate for president in 1931. However, caught as he was between right-wing radicalism and the 'Depression movements', his political future was threatened. His support-base was put under especial strain by the Depression movement operating in his home region in the Kalajoki Valley; this led to outbreaks of unrest (the 'Nivala Nag Revolt' in 1932) and to division within the Agrarian Party. Strong pressure was also directed at Kallio as an individual. In the parliamentary elections of 1933 he almost failed to be elected.

The repeal of the Prohibition Act in 1932 was also a heavy blow to Kallio. He had been a convinced teetotaller for his whole life, was a supporter of prohibition and was, after Alkio, the chairman of the Kieltolakiliitto, an association that supported the act. As speaker of parliament, he was now forced to bring down his gavel on the decision.

Kallio's position as leader of the Agrarian Party was strengthened again in the mid 1930s when Sunila retired from politics and the Karelian strongman Juho Niukkanen (1888 - 1954) was out of parliament for an electoral period.

The struggle against right-wing radicalism had brought the Centre and the Social Democrats closer together, which Kallio regarded as a positive development. The approaching presidential election also involved discussions on cooperation. After the 1936 parliamentary elections, the Agrarian Party and the SDP agreed to cooperate in forming a government, following the example of Sweden. However, President Svinhufvud refused to appoint a 'red-soil' government, and Kallio once again formed a centrist government. As its prime minister, he was elected president.

A parliamentarian president of integration

In 1925, Kallio had already given cautious consideration to his chances in a presidential election. His showing as a candidate in 1931 was a disappointment. He agreed to stand again with reluctance, and the result of the elections for members of the electoral college was not good (56 members, 16.6%). This was enough, however, since the SDP wished to ensure that Svinhufvud was not re-elected. Kallio was elected in the second round with 177 votes; Svinhufvud received 104 and Ståhlberg 19. The electoral-college members of the Swedish People's Party (Svenska Folkpartiet) may be regarded as the key to his victory; the 'toffs' refused to vote for Ståhlberg in the first round, even though they knew that Kallio would be elected if they did not. Kallio's 'real-Finn' attitude was known to have softened.

As president, Kallio was able to realise the goals of his long political career, in particular that of social reconciliation and integration. He had been elected in the shadow of two great national compromises: 'red soil' and linguistic tolerance. He appointed a majority Agrarian-Social Democrat government led by Aimo Cajander of the Progressive Party (Edistyspuolue) and supported it purposefully but while keeping in the background. The government resolved the long-standing linguistic dispute at the University of Helsinki ('lex Hannula') and settled the remaining rancour from the Red uprising ('lex Tokoi'). Kallio also used the notion of integration to justify his agreement to an initiative aimed at suppressing the Patriotic People's Movement (Isänmaallinen Kansanliike) and undertaken by his political protégé, the interior minister Urho Kekkonen.

Kallio adopted the role of a parliamentarian president and refrained from personal power-wielding; because of this, he has unjustly been called a weak president. It was not a question of weakness but of Kallio's view of the president's function. Under Kallio's leadership, Finland returned to "everyday parliamentarianism", as Jaakko Nousiainen has so aptly put it.

Kallio also emphasised his goal of integration by travelling extensively throughout the country to meet the public. His wife Kaisa Kallio often accompanied him on these trips, and the Kallios soon became a popular and respected presidential couple. The well-known aversion of right-wingers, which initially even manifested itself in small demonstrations, died down. The public's respect was increased by the awareness of the president's favourable attitude towards religion, his abstention from alcohol and the blamelessness of his lifestyle.

The president was less keen on foreign travel, partly because of his lack of linguistic skills. His only foreign visits as president were to Sweden in 1938 and 1939. The only state visit to Finland during his presidency was that of President Konstantin Päts of Estonia in 1937.

Kallio's period in office was clouded by health problems. In the spring and summer of 1938, he was ill or recuperating for two-and-a-half months, and in 1939 it took him until early autumn to recover from a heart attack that he suffered in January. Illness prevented him from participating in the negotiations that began in spring 1938 on the initiative of the Soviet Union; the foreign ministers Rudolf Holsti and Eljas Erkko led the Finnish side. When the president returned to his duties in September 1939, the portents of war could already be felt.

The president's Winter War

In foreign policy, Kallio's attitudes were also characterised by moderation. He had opposed the plan of the regent, Marshal Mannerheim, for a St Petersburg expeditionary campaign in 1919 and had displayed restraint on the issue of [Russian] Eastern Karelia. His attitude towards Hitler's Germany was one of distaste, as was - of course - his view of the Soviet Union; he thought that the threat from this quarter should be countered mainly by reliance on the League of Nations. As president he supported his trusted man, the foreign minister Rudolf Holsti (1881 - 1945) and favoured closer relations with other Nordic countries while seeking to further reassure the Soviet Union.

He did not, however, succeed in the latter endeavour; the atmosphere became ever tenser, developing into a threat of war. With the Moscow negotiations already in progress, Kallio in vain sought support from Sweden and other Nordic countries, the last attempt coming at the meeting of Nordic heads of state on 18-19 October 1939. At the same time he supported more effective preparations for war. When Mannerheim became involved in disputes with the government - in particular with Prime Minister Cajander and Finance Minister Väinö Tanner concerning money matters and with Defence Minister Niukkanen concerning scope of authority - and threatened in summer 1939 to resign as chairman of the Defence Council, Kallio prevented this through his personal intervention and his authority. Kallio and Mannerheim respected each other.

In the negotiations preceding the Winter War, Kallio took a more uncompromising line than, for example, Paasikivi and Mannerheim. The president feared that the laboriously created internal unity would be smashed if Finland agreed to the cessions of territory demanded. Nor could he believe that Stalin wanted only what he was demanding. Kallio thought that if a disunited Finland became the target of an attack later on, the danger would be greater than if the attack came now, while the country was united, even though he knew that military assistance could not be expected.

During the Winter War, Kallio concentrated on the role of a morale booster. Both at home and abroad he became the personification of the unity and will to defend itself of a small nation that had unjustly come under attack. With the attention of the world focused on Finland, the peasant president became a well-known and respected figure in the press; books about him were also published in a number of languages. The president's many public appearances had a great effect on the country's united determination to defend itself. "Our nation's unity of purpose, for which I have done a great deal of work, is magnificent", Kallio wrote to his author friend Maila Talvio as the war was nearing its end, and he stressed that it was precisely the achievement and maintenance of such unity that was his main task during the defensive battle. Kallio's son-in-law Paavo Pihlajamaa fell in the Winter War.

As far as political leadership during the Winter War was concerned, Kallio played a minor role - and a fumbling one at that. This was partly due to the fact that the 'inner circle' (Risto Ryti, Tanner and Paasikivi) initially tried to keep the president unaware of the peace feelers that were being put out. Kallio was more in sympathy with the line of those unwilling to compromise, but he had to bow to the inevitable. He finally agreed to the conclusion of peace after becoming convinced that the alternative would be the extension of the overall war to Finnish territory if the Germans tried to prevent the arrival of supporting forces from the Western powers. When he signed the document giving the Moscow peace negotiators authority to accept the terms of the treaty, the tormented president uttered the well-known words: "Let my hand wither, that has been forced to sign this piece of paper." Some six months later his arm became paralysed.

The last spell of work

After the Winter War, Kallio concentrated on raising the morale of a nation depressed by wartime sacrifices and harsh peace terms. Immediately after peace was concluded, he made a broadcast speech in which he stressed as most important the fact that the nation itself, its sense of nationhood and its honour had been preserved "transfigured and more purposeful than ever concerning its future tasks". It was now necessary for people to combine forces in the work of reconstruction. The president laid especial emphasis on a fair solution to the situation of evacuees; and his support did indeed contribute greatly to the swiftness and content of decisions on settlement and compensation. He set a personal example by handing over land.

As far as the increasingly difficult issue of foreign politics was concerned, Kallio did not play much of a role, merely confirming government decisions. These included agreement to Russian demands for military transit rights to their base at Hanko and the resignation of Väinö Tanner from the Council of State. The great change in Finland's foreign policy in August 1940 (the transit agreement with Germany) occurred without Kallio's participation (at least, active participation). His health suffered a final collapse with a stroke on 28 August and he recovered only sufficiently to make a dignified departure.

Kallio resigned on 27 November 1940. After parliament had unanimously elected Risto Ryti as his successor, Kallio made preparations to leave for Nivala to recuperate and spend his retirement there. But his heart was irreparably weakened and could not cope with the touching farewell ceremonies. The peasant president's death was the most memorable in Finland's history: in front of a guard of honour during the playing of the March of the Men of Pori (Porilaisten marssi) in the arms of Marshal Mannerheim. It is no exaggeration to speak of the Winter War's most distinguished fallen hero.

Kallio's significance

Posterity's assessments of Kallio have varied. He has been at once the exceptionally respected peasant president and a belittled "sideliner", a "weak" president whose inability to understand foreign policy contributed to Finland's becoming involved in the Winter War. The most recent research (including that of Jaakko Nousiainen, Lauri Haataja and Kari Hokkanen) has done more justice to both his stance as president, with its emphasis on parliamentarianism, and to his steadfast attitude on the eve of the Winter War.

Kallio is without question one of the most important politicians of the first decades after Finland's achievement of independence. One is even justified in calling him 'the first citizen of the first republic', because his career lasted the longest and took him the highest. His career is highlighted less by the dramatic turning points - 1917-18, the early 1930s, 1939-40 - than by the periods of more peaceful development during which his tenacity and purposefully conciliatory attitude really came into their own.

”Meidän on luotava sellainen Suomi, jossa ei ole punaisia eikä valkoisia, vaan ainoastaan isänmaataan rakastavia suomalaisia, Suomen tasavallan kansalaisia, jotka kaikki tuntevat olevansa yhteiskunnan jäseniä ja viihtyvät täällä”

Kyösti Kallion sanat Nivalan kirkossa 5.5.1918

Tasavallan 4. presidentti
Kyösti Kallio oli pitkän linjan poliitikko, jonka uran keskeisin toiminta-ajatus oli itsenäisyyden vahvistaminen eheyttämällä yhteiskuntaa taloudellisen ja sosiaalisen tasa-arvon kautta. Kallion elämäntyön merkitys korostui erityisesti rauhallisen kehityksen jaksoina, jolloin hänen sitkeytensä ja päämäärätietoinen sovittelevuutensa pääsivät parhaiten oikeuksiinsa. Talvisodan ajan presidenttinä Kallio oli erityisesti kansan rohkaisija ja moraalinen selkäranka.

Yhdessä Kallion toimintaa ja elämää kuvaavan aikajanan ja keskeisen elämäkertakirjallisuuden kanssa sivustolla syntyy kokonaiskuva hänen elämästään ja aikakaudestaan.

Kaisa ja Kyösti Kallion kirjeenvaihto 1904-1937 julkaistaan sivustolla kokonaisuudessaan. Puolisokirjeenvaihdossa näkyy kaksi tunteikasta, henkisesti rikasta ja eettisesti lujaa persoonallisuutta. Tulevan presidenttiparin kirjeet kertovat, mistä arkeen on ammennettu tekemisen usko.

Kari Hokkasen Kallio-elämäkerta 1986 on ensimmäinen tieteellinen elämäkerta ja kokonaiskuvaus. Saatesanoissaan Hokkanen osoittaa kiitollisuutta, että hän voi elää itsenäisessä, henkisesti vapaassa ja aineellisesti hyvinvoivassa tasavallassa, josta on kiittäminen Suomen kansaa ja sen valitsemia viisaita ja kaukonäköisiä johtajia. Hänen mielestään yksi heistä on Kyösti Kallio, suuri suomalainen ihminen, poliitikko ja valtiomies.



SYNTYY YLIVIESKASSA
1873
RAAHEN KESKIKOULUUN
1886
NUORISOSEURATOIMINTA OULUN LYSEOSSA
1892
HEIKKILÄN JA MEHTÄLÄN TALOJEN ISÄNTÄ
1894
NIVALAN NUORISOSEURAN ESIMIEHEKSI
1895
MAAMIESSEURAN PUHEENJOHTAJAKSI JA LOPULTA JOHTOKUNTAAN
1900
NAIMISIIN KATARIINA (KAISA) NIVALAN KANSSA
1902
VIENO SYNTYY
1903
NIVALAN KUNTAKOKOUKSEN JA KUNNANVALTUUSTON PUHEENJOHTAJAKSI
1904
TALONPOIKAISSÄÄDYN EDUSTAJANA SÄÄTYVALTIOPÄIVILLE
1904
BODENIN KOKOUS
1904
VEIKKO SYNTYY
1906
KERTTU SYNTYY
1907
EDUSKUNTAAN NUORSUOMALAISTEN JA SUOMEN MAALAISVÄEN LIITON YHTEISLISTALTA
1907
MAALAISLIITON PUHEENJOHTAJAKSI
1908
KALERVO SYNTYY
1909
KAINO SYNTYY
1911
MAALAISLIITON EDUSKUNTARYHMÄN PUHEENJOHTAJA
1912
NIVALAN OSUUSKASSAN HALLITUKSEN VARAPUHEENJOHTAJAKSI
1913
NIVALAN OSUUSMEIJERIN JÄSEN JA PUHEENJOHTAJA
1914
KATRI SYNTYY
1915
AURAN HALLITUSNEUVOSTON JÄSEN
1917
PIETARIN SUOMALAISLÄHETYSTÖÖN OSALLISTUMINEN
1917
SENAATTORIKSI JA MAANVILJELYSTOIMIKUNNAN PÄÄLLIKÖKSI
1917
MAATALOUSLAKKOJEN SOVITTELIJANA SEKÄ SÄÄNNÖSTELYHALLINNON HOITO
1917
EDUSKUNNAN HAJOTUS
1917
ELINTARVIKEASIOIDEN VASTUU
1917
ITSENÄISYYSSENAATISSA
1917
TORPPARIEN VAPAUTUSLAIN ESITTÄMINEN
1918
HELINGISSÄ PIILESKELY SISÄLLISSODAN AJAN
1918
MAATALOUSTUOTTAJIEN KESKUSLIITON VALTUUSKUNNAN JÄSENEKSI
1918
HELSINGIN SENAATIN HOITAMINEN
1918
PUHE NIVALAN KIRKOSSA
1918
KALLION JOHTAMA SENAATIN JA VAASAN SENAATIN YHDISTYMINEN
1918
MONARKISMIN VASTUSTUS
1918
”KALLION LEIKKAUS”
1918
CASTRÉNIN JA MYÖHEMMIN VENNOLAN HALLITUKSEEN
1919
PELLERVO-SEURAN JÄSENEKSI
1920
SUOMI-YHTIÖN EDUSTAJISTON JA HALLINTONEUVOSTON JÄSENEKSI
1920
EDUSKUNNAN PUHEMIEHEKSI
1920
MAATALOUS-OSAKE-PANKIN HALLINTONEUVOSTOON
1921
LEX KALLIO
1921
MAALAISKUNTIEN LIITON LIITTOVALTUUSTON PUHEENJOHTAJAKSI
1921
EDUSKUNNAN PUHEMIEHEKSI
1922
KALLION I HALLITUS
1922
STÅHLBERG MÄÄRÄÄ UUDET VAALIT JA VAPAUTTAA KALLION MINISTERIT TEHTÄVISTÄÄN
1923
EDUSKUNNAN PUHEMIEHEKSI
1924
KULKULAITOSTEN JA YLEISTEN TÖIDEN MINISTERIKSI
1925
KALLION II HALLITUS
1925
EDUSKUNNAN PUHEMIEHEKSI
1927
SUOMEN PANKIN JOHTOKUNNAN JÄSENEKSI
1927
VALTION HALLINTONEUVOSTON JÄSENEKSI
1927
ENSO-GUTZEITIN HALLINTONEUVOSTOSSA
1927
LAPUAN LIIKE
1929
KALLION III HALLITUS
1929
KALLION KOLMANNEN HALLITUKSEN ERO
1930
EDUSKUNNAN PUHEMIEHEKSI
1930
KIELTOLAKILIITON PUHEENJOHTAJAKSI
1930
SVINHUFVUD PRESIDENTIKSI
1931
KIELTOLAKI KUMOTAAN
1932
NIVALAN KONIKAPINA
1932
KULKULAITOSKOMITEAN PUHEENJOHTAJAKSI
1932
VALINTA EDUSKUNTAAN VAARASSA
1933
OSUUSKASSOJEN KESKUSLAINARAHASTON HALLINTONEUVOSTON JÄSENEKSI
1934
SUOMALAIS-VIROLAISEN SEURAN ESIMIEHEKSI
1936
KALLION IV HALLITUS
1936
KULKUKOMITEAN MIETINTÖ
1936
RUDOLF HOLSTI MOSKOVAAN VIERAILULLE
1937
KALLIO PRESIDENTIKSI
1937
KALLIO SAIRAANA
1938
SYDÄNIFARKTI
1939
KALLION SAIRAUS ESTI PÄÄSYN ALUEVAATIMUSNEUVOTTELUIHIN
1939
KALLIO TUKEE MANNERHEIMIN JATKAMISTA PUOLUSTUSNEUVOSTON PUHEENJOHTAJANA
1939
NEUVOTTELUT NEUVOSTOLIITON KANSSA
1939
KALLIO ROHKAISIJANA TALVISODAN AIKANA
1939
SODAN MERKKEJÄ
1939
POHJOISMAISESSA VALTIOPÄÄMIESKOKOUKSESSA
1939
SUOMEN KULTTUURIRAHASTON KUNNIAESIMIEHEKSI
1940
MOSKOVAN RAUHANSOPIMUS
1940
KALLION PUHE RADIOSSA
1940
KAUTTAKULKUSOPIMUS SAKSAN KANSSA
1940
TERVEYS LUHISTUU
1940
KALLIO EROAA PRESIDENTIN TOIMESTA
1940
KUOLEE SYDÄNKOHTAUKSEEN
1940

I Perusta 1873 – 1904
Kirjailija: Kari Hokkanen

Kyösti Kallion valtiomiesura rakentui vankalle perustalle: hän polveutui voimakkaista pohjoispohjalaisista talonpoikaissuvuista, ja hänen uupumatonta toimintatarmoaan tukivat monet käytännön elämään, teoreettiseen ajatteluun ja taiteeseen liittyvät erityislahjat.

Hän kasvoi valistuneessa kodissa, jossa tunnettiin vastuuta yhteisistä asioista. Varakkaan sukulaistädin kasvattina hän sai erinomaiset taloudelliset mahdollisuudet tuon ajan talonpoikaisväestön keskitasoa parempaan koulusivistykseen ja itsensä monipuoliseen kehittämiseen.

1800-luvun lopun Pohjois-Pohjanmaalla tuntuneet aatevirtaukset vaikuttivat ratkaisevasti Kyösti Kallioon. Luja uskonnollisuus oli jo kodin perintöä, ja siitä tuli varhain myös hänen henkilökohtainen vakaumuksensa. Toisaalta hänen katsomuksiaan avarsi tutustuminen kansallismielisyyden aatteisiin. Nuorisoseura- ja raittiustyöstä hän löysi omimman aatemaailmansa, käytännön snellmanilaisuuden. Kun Kallio sittemmin antautui yhteiskunnalliseen toimintaan kunnan ja seurakunnan sekä taloudellisten yhteisöjen ja lopulta myös puolue- ja valtioelämän palveluksessa, hän oli muodostanut itselleen jo vakaat aatteelliset käsitykset.

Kyösti Kallio solmi vuonna 1902 avioliiton Kaisa Nivalan kanssa. Puolisoltaan hän sai jatkuvaa tukea ottaessaan vastaan yhä haasteellisempia tehtäviä. Kaisa Kallio jaksoi kuuden lapsen kasvattamisen ohella huolehtia suurtaloudesta. Hän jaksoi olla myös yksin. Kaisa Kallio oli vakuuttunut siitä, että hänen miehensä noudatti politiikassa kutsumusta: Jumalan hänelle määräämää tehtävää Suomen kansan parhaaksi.

II Nuori maalaispoliitikko 1904 – 1916
Kirjailija: Kari Hokkanen

Kyösti Kallion poliittinen ura alkoi kunnallisista tehtävistä. Hänen näyttönsä yhteisten asioiden hoitamisessa olivat siksi vakuuttavia, että kotiseutu näki etunsa mukaiseksi lähettää hänet — vain 31-vuotiaana — edustajakseen säätyvaltiopäiville vuonna 1904. Nuoresta maalaispoliitikosta kypsyi uudistusmielinen perustuslaillinen, joka löysi luontevasti paikkansa nuorsuomalaisen puolueen riveistä.

Hän osoitti alusta pitäen kyvykkyyttä toimia myös valtakunnallisen tason poliitikkona paneutumalla asioihin perusteellisesti, tekemällä ahkerasti työtä ja tulemalla hyvin toimeen edustajatoveriensa kanssa.

Suomen valtiollisen elämän murros 1905-1906 leimasi Kallion valtiomiesuran alkuvaihetta. Hän lukeutui säätynsä uudistusmielisiin ja kannatti yleistä äänioikeutta, yksikamarista eduskuntaa ja kansanvallan laajentamista. Kannanotot näihin kysymyksiin paljastivat hänen silloisen puolueensa epäyhtenäisyyden. Kun uusi maalaispuolue vuonna 1906 perustettiin, Kallio hetken emmittyään liittyi siihen.

Kallio erottui useimmista muista nuoren maalaispuolueen poliitikoista sekä kokemuksensa, tietojensa että kykyjensä puolesta. Niinpä hän varsin nopeasti kohosi puolueen johtoon ja toimi vuosina 1908-1916 sen puheenjohtajana. Yhdessä eteläpohjalaisen aatteenmiehen Santeri Alkion kanssa hän vaikutti ratkaisevasti maalaisliiton ohjelman, organisaation, talouden ja lehdistön muokkautumiseen. Kallion puheenjohtajakaudella maalaisliitosta kehkeytyi puolue, joka olojen vapauduttua kykeni täyttämään paikkansa yhtenä itsenäisen Suomen vastuullisista asianhoitajista.

Tämä kiihkeän poliittisen toiminnan ja työn aika sattui yksiin Kallion yksityiselämän vakiintumisen kanssa. Hänen perheensä kasvoi lopulliseen kokoonsa, ja kotitila Nivalassa vaurastua, kun uusia viljelysmaita otettiin käyttöön, karjataloutta modernisoitiin ja tuotantoa järkeistettiin tehokkaalla suunnittelulla.

III Tasavallan eturiviin 1917 – 1921
Kirjailija: Kari Hokkanen

Kyösti Kallion poliittinen ura alkoi kunnallisista tehtävistä. Hänen näyttönsä yhteisten asioiden hoitamisessa olivat siksi vakuuttavia, että kotiseutu näki etunsa mukaiseksi lähettää hänet — vain 31-vuotiaana — edustajakseen säätyvaltiopäiville vuonna 1904. Nuoresta maalaispoliitikosta kypsyi uudistusmielinen perustuslaillinen, joka löysi luontevasti paikkansa nuorsuomalaisen puolueen riveistä.

Hän osoitti alusta pitäen kyvykkyyttä toimia myös valtakunnallisen tason poliitikkona paneutumalla asioihin perusteellisesti, tekemällä ahkerasti työtä ja tulemalla hyvin toimeen edustajatoveriensa kanssa.

Suomen valtiollisen elämän murros 1905-1906 leimasi Kallion valtiomiesuran alkuvaihetta. Hän lukeutui säätynsä uudistusmielisiin ja kannatti yleistä äänioikeutta, yksikamarista eduskuntaa ja kansanvallan laajentamista. Kannanotot näihin kysymyksiin paljastivat hänen silloisen puolueensa epäyhtenäisyyden. Kun uusi maalaispuolue vuonna 1906 perustettiin, Kallio hetken emmittyään liittyi siihen.

Kallio erottui useimmista muista nuoren maalaispuolueen poliitikoista sekä kokemuksensa, tietojensa että kykyjensä puolesta. Niinpä hän varsin nopeasti kohosi puolueen johtoon ja toimi vuosina 1908-1916 sen puheenjohtajana. Yhdessä eteläpohjalaisen aatteenmiehen Santeri Alkion kanssa hän vaikutti ratkaisevasti maalaisliiton ohjelman, organisaation, talouden ja lehdistön muokkautumiseen. Kallion puheenjohtajakaudella maalaisliitosta kehkeytyi puolue, joka olojen vapauduttua kykeni täyttämään paikkansa yhtenä itsenäisen Suomen vastuullisista asianhoitajista.

Tämä kiihkeän poliittisen toiminnan ja työn aika sattui yksiin Kallion yksityiselämän vakiintumisen kanssa. Hänen perheensä kasvoi lopulliseen kokoonsa, ja kotitila Nivalassa vaurastua, kun uusia viljelysmaita otettiin käyttöön, karjataloutta modernisoitiin ja tuotantoa järkeistettiin tehokkaalla suunnittelulla.







Finland (Finnish: Suomi [ˈsuo̯mi] i; Swedish: Finland [ˈfɪ̌nland] i), officially the Republic of Finland (Finnish: Suomen tasavalta; Swedish: Republiken Finland (listen to alli)),[note 2] is a Nordic country in Northern Europe. It borders Sweden to the northwest, Norway to the north, and Russia to the east, with the Gulf of Bothnia to the west and the Gulf of Finland to the south, across from Estonia. Finland covers an area of 338,145 square kilometres (130,559 sq mi)[5] with a population of 5.6 million. Helsinki is the capital and largest city. The vast majority of the population are ethnic Finns. Finnish and Swedish are the official languages, Swedish being the native language of 5.2% of the population.[12] Finland's climate varies from humid continental in the south to boreal in the north. The land cover is primarily a boreal forest biome, with more than 180,000 recorded lakes.[13]

Finland was first inhabited around 9000 BC after the Last Glacial Period.[14] The Stone Age introduced several different ceramic styles and cultures. The Bronze Age and Iron Age were characterized by contacts with other cultures in Fennoscandia and the Baltic region.[15] From the late 13th century, Finland became a part of Sweden as a consequence of the Northern Crusades. In 1809, as a result of the Finnish War, Finland became part of the Russian Empire as the autonomous Grand Duchy of Finland, during which Finnish art flourished and the idea of independence began to take hold. In 1906, Finland became the first European state to grant universal suffrage, and the first in the world to give all adult citizens the right to run for public office.[16][note 3] After the 1917 Russian Revolution, Finland declared independence from Russia. In 1918, the fledgling state was divided by the Finnish Civil War. During World War II, Finland fought the Soviet Union in the Winter War and the Continuation War, and Nazi Germany in the Lapland War. It subsequently lost parts of its territory, but maintained its independence.

Finland largely remained an agrarian country until the 1950s. After World War II, it rapidly industrialized and developed an advanced economy, while building an extensive welfare state based on the Nordic model; the country soon enjoyed widespread prosperity and a high per capita income.[17] During the Cold War, Finland adopted an official policy of neutrality. Finland joined the European Union in 1995, the Eurozone at its inception in 1999 and NATO in 2023. It is also a member of the United Nations, the Nordic Council, the Schengen Area, the Council of Europe, the World Trade Organization and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). Finland performs highly in metrics of national performance, including education, economic competitiveness, civil liberties, quality of life and human development.[18][19][20][21]

History
Main article: History of Finland
Prehistory
Main article: History of Finland § Prehistory
The area that is now Finland was settled in, at the latest, around 8,500 BC during the Stone Age towards the end of the last glacial period. The artefacts the first settlers left behind present characteristics that are shared with those found in Estonia, Russia, and Norway.[22] The earliest people were hunter-gatherers, using stone tools.[23]

The first pottery appeared in 5200 BC, when the Comb Ceramic culture was introduced.[24] The arrival of the Corded Ware culture in Southern coastal Finland between 3000 and 2500 BC may have coincided with the start of agriculture.[25] Even with the introduction of agriculture, hunting and fishing continued to be important parts of the subsistence economy.


Stone Age bear head gavel found in Paltamo, Kainuu[26][27]
In the Bronze Age permanent all-year-round cultivation and animal husbandry spread, but the cold climate phase slowed the change.[28] The Seima-Turbino phenomenon brought the first bronze artefacts to the region and possibly also the Finno-Ugric languages.[28][29] Commercial contacts that had so far mostly been to Estonia started to extend to Scandinavia. Domestic manufacture of bronze artefacts started 1300 BC.[30]

In the Iron Age population grew. Finland Proper was the most densely populated area. Commercial contacts in the Baltic Sea region grew and extended during the eighth and ninth centuries. Main exports from Finland were furs, slaves, castoreum, and falcons to European courts. Imports included silk and other fabrics, jewelry, Ulfberht swords, and, in lesser extent, glass. Production of iron started approximately in 500 BC.[31] At the end of the ninth century, indigenous artefact culture, especially weapons and women's jewelry, had more common local features than ever before. This has been interpreted to be expressing common Finnish identity.[32]

An early form of Finnic languages spread to the Baltic Sea region approximately 1900 BC. Common Finnic language was spoken around Gulf of Finland 2000 years ago. The dialects from which the modern-day Finnish language was developed came into existence during the Iron Age.[33] Although distantly related, the Sami people retained the hunter-gatherer lifestyle longer than the Finns. The Sami cultural identity and the Sami language have survived in Lapland, the northernmost province.

The name Suomi (Finnish for 'Finland') has uncertain origins, but a common etymology with saame (the Sami) has been suggested.[34][35] In the earliest historical sources, from the 12th and 13th centuries, the term Finland refers to the coastal region around Turku. This region later became known as Finland Proper in distinction from the country name Finland.[36] (See also Etymology of Finns.)

Swedish era
Main article: Finland under Swedish rule
The 12th and 13th centuries were a violent time in the northern Baltic Sea. The Livonian Crusade was ongoing and the Finnish tribes such as the Tavastians and Karelians were in frequent conflicts with Novgorod and with each other. Also, during the 12th and 13th centuries several crusades from the Catholic realms of the Baltic Sea area were made against the Finnish tribes. Danes waged at least three crusades to Finland, in 1187 or slightly earlier,[37] in 1191 and in 1202,[38] and Swedes, possibly the so-called second crusade to Finland, in 1249 against Tavastians and the third crusade to Finland in 1293 against the Karelians. The so-called first crusade to Finland, possibly in 1155, is most likely an unreal event.[39]

As a result of the crusades (mostly with the second crusade led by Birger Jarl) and the colonization of some Finnish coastal areas with Christian Swedish population during the Middle Ages,[40] Finland gradually became part of the kingdom of Sweden and the sphere of influence of the Catholic Church.[41] Under Sweden, Finland was annexed as part of the cultural order of Western Europe.[42]


Now lying within Helsinki, Suomenlinna is a UNESCO World Heritage Site consisting of an inhabited 18th-century sea fortress built on six islands. It is one of Finland's most popular tourist attractions.
Swedish was the dominant language of the nobility, administration, and education; Finnish was chiefly a language for the peasantry, clergy, and local courts in predominantly Finnish-speaking areas. During the Protestant Reformation, the Finns gradually converted to Lutheranism.[43]

In the 16th century, a bishop and Lutheran Reformer Mikael Agricola published the first written works in Finnish;[44] and Finland's current capital city, Helsinki, was founded by King Gustav Vasa in 1555.[45] The first university in Finland, the Royal Academy of Turku, was established by Queen Christina of Sweden at the proposal of Count Per Brahe in 1640.[46][47]

The Finns reaped a reputation in the Thirty Years' War (1618–1648) as a well-trained cavalrymen called "Hakkapeliitta".[48] Finland suffered a severe famine in 1695–1697, during which about one third of the Finnish population died,[49] and a devastating plague a few years later.

In the 18th century, wars between Sweden and Russia twice led to the occupation of Finland by Russian forces, times known to the Finns as the Greater Wrath (1714–1721) and the Lesser Wrath (1742–1743).[50][49] It is estimated that almost an entire generation of young men was lost during the Great Wrath, due mainly to the destruction of homes and farms, and the burning of Helsinki.[51]

Grand Duchy of Finland
Main article: Grand Duchy of Finland
The Swedish era ended in the Finnish War in 1809. On 29 March 1809, having been taken over by the armies of Alexander I of Russia, Finland became an autonomous Grand Duchy in the Russian Empire with the recognition given at the Diet held in Porvoo. This situation lasted until the end of 1917.[50] In 1812, Alexander I incorporated the Russian Vyborg province into the Grand Duchy of Finland. In 1854, Finland became involved in Russia's involvement in the Crimean War, when the British and French navies bombed the Finnish coast and Åland during the so-called Åland War.[52]


Edvard Isto, The Attack, 1899. The Russian eagle is attacking the Finnish Maiden, trying to steal her book of laws.
Though the Swedish language was still widely spoken, during this period the Finnish language began to gain more recognition. From the 1860s onwards, a strong Finnish nationalist movement known as the Fennoman movement grew. One of its most prominent leading figures of the movement was the philosopher and politician J. V. Snellman, who pushed for the stabilization of the status of the Finnish language and its own currency, the Finnish markka, in the Grand Duchy of Finland.[52][53] Milestones included the publication of what would become Finland's national epic – the Kalevala – in 1835, and the Finnish language's achieving equal legal status with Swedish in 1892. In the spirit of the notion of Adolf Ivar Arwidsson (1791–1858) – "we are not Swedes, we do not want to become Russians, let us therefore, be Finns" – a Finnish national identity was established.[54] Still there was no genuine independence movement in Finland until the early 20th century.[55]

The Finnish famine of 1866–1868 occurred after freezing temperatures in early September ravaged crops,[56] and it killed approximately 15% of the population, making it one of the worst famines in European history. The famine led the Russian Empire to ease financial regulations, and investment rose in the following decades. Economic development was rapid.[57] The gross domestic product (GDP) per capita was still half of that of the United States and a third of that of Britain.[57]

From 1869 until 1917, the Russian Empire pursued a policy known as the "Russification of Finland". This policy was interrupted between 1905 and 1908. In 1906, universal suffrage was adopted in the Grand Duchy of Finland. However, the relationship between the Grand Duchy and the Russian Empire soured when the Russian government made moves to restrict Finnish autonomy. For example, universal suffrage was, in practice, virtually meaningless, since the tsar did not have to approve any of the laws adopted by the Finnish parliament. The desire for independence gained ground, first among radical liberals[58] and socialists, driven in part by a declaration called the February Manifesto by the last tsar of the Russian Empire, Nicholas II, on 15 February 1899.[59]

Civil war and early independence
Main articles: Independence of Finland and Finnish Civil War
After the 1917 February Revolution, the position of Finland as a part of the Russian Empire was questioned, mainly by Social Democrats. The Finnish Parliament, controlled by social democrats, passed the so-called Power Act to give the highest authority to the Parliament. This was rejected by the Russian Provisional Government which decided to dissolve the Parliament.[60] New elections were conducted, in which right-wing parties won with a slim majority. Some social democrats refused to accept the result and still claimed that the dissolution of the parliament (and thus the ensuing elections) were extralegal. The two nearly equally powerful political blocs, the right-wing parties, and the social-democratic party were highly antagonized.


Finnish military leader and statesman C. G. E. Mannerheim as general officer leading the White Victory Parade at the end of the Finnish Civil War in Helsinki, 1918
The October Revolution in Russia changed the geopolitical situation once more. Suddenly, the right-wing parties in Finland started to reconsider their decision to block the transfer of the highest executive power from the Russian government to Finland, as the Bolsheviks took power in Russia. The right-wing government, led by Prime Minister P. E. Svinhufvud, presented the Declaration of Independence on 4 December 1917, which was officially approved on 6 December, by the Finnish Parliament. The Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR), led by Vladimir Lenin, recognized independence on 4 January 1918.[61]

On 27 January 1918 the government began to disarm the Russian forces in Pohjanmaa. The socialists gained control of southern Finland and Helsinki, but the White government continued in exile from Vaasa.[62][63] This sparked the brief but bitter civil war. The Whites, who were supported by Imperial Germany, prevailed over the Reds,[64] and their self-proclaimed Finnish Socialist Workers' Republic.[65] After the war, tens of thousands of Reds were interned in camps, where thousands were executed or died from malnutrition and disease. Deep social and political enmity was sown between the Reds and Whites and would last until the Winter War and even beyond.[66][67] The civil war and the 1918–1920 activist expeditions called "Kinship Wars" into Soviet Russia strained Eastern relations.[68][69]


Helsinki Olympic Stadium in 1938
After brief experimentation with monarchy, when an attempt to make Prince Frederick Charles of Hesse King of Finland was unsuccessful, Finland became a presidential republic, with K. J. Ståhlberg elected as its first president in 1919. As a liberal nationalist with a legal background, Ståhlberg anchored the state in liberal democracy, supported the rule of law, and embarked on internal reforms.[70] Finland was also one of the first European countries to strongly aim for equality for women, with Miina Sillanpää serving in Väinö Tanner's cabinet as the first female minister in Finnish history in 1926–1927.[71] The Finnish–Russian border was defined in 1920 by the Treaty of Tartu, largely following the historic border but granting Pechenga (Finnish: Petsamo) and its Barents Sea harbour to Finland.[50] Finnish democracy did not experience any Soviet coup attempts and likewise survived the anti-communist Lapua Movement.

In 1917, the population was three million. Credit-based land reform was enacted after the civil war, increasing the proportion of the capital-owning population.[57] About 70% of workers were occupied in agriculture and 10% in industry.[72]

World War II
Main article: Finland during World War II

Finnish troops raise a flag on the three-country cairn in April 1945 at the close of the World War II in Finland.
The Soviet Union launched the Winter War on 30 November 1939 in an effort to annex Finland.[73] The Finnish Democratic Republic was established by Joseph Stalin at the beginning of the war to govern Finland after Soviet conquest.[74] The Red Army was defeated in numerous battles, notably at the Battle of Suomussalmi. After two months of negligible progress on the battlefield, as well as severe losses of men and materiel, the Soviets put an end to the Finnish Democratic Republic in late January 1940 and recognized the legal Finnish government as the legitimate government of Finland.[75] Soviet forces began to make progress in February and reached Vyborg in March. The fighting came to an end on 13 March 1940 with the signing of the Moscow Peace Treaty. Finland had successfully defended its independence, but ceded 9% of its territory to the Soviet Union.


Areas ceded by Finland to the Soviet Union during World War II. The Porkkala land lease was returned to Finland in 1956.
Hostilities resumed in June 1941 with the Continuation War, when Finland aligned with Germany following the latter's invasion of the Soviet Union; the primary aim was to recapture the territory lost to the Soviets scarcely one year before.[76] Finnish forces occupied East Karelia from 1941 to 1944. Finnish resistance to the Vyborg–Petrozavodsk offensive in the summer of 1944 led to a standstill, and the two sides reached an armistice. This was followed by the Lapland War of 1944–1945, when Finland fought retreating German forces in northern Finland. Famous war heroes of the aforementioned wars include Simo Häyhä,[77][78] Aarne Juutilainen,[79] and Lauri Törni.[80]

The Armistice and treaty signed with the Soviet Union in 1944 and 1948 included Finnish obligations, restraints, and reparations, as well as further Finnish territorial concessions in addition to those in the Moscow Peace Treaty. As a result of the two wars, Finland ceded Petsamo, along with parts of Finnish Karelia and Salla; this amounted to 12% of Finland's land area, 20% of its industrial capacity, its second-largest city, Vyborg (Viipuri), and the ice-free port of Liinakhamari (Liinahamari). Almost the whole Finnish population, some 400,000 people, fled these areas. Finland lost 97,000 soldiers and was forced to pay war reparations of $300 million ($3.7 billion in 2021); nevertheless, it avoided occupation by Soviet forces and managed to retain its independence.

For a few decades after 1944, the Communists were a strong political party. The Soviet Union persuaded Finland to reject Marshall Plan aid. However, in the hope of preserving Finland's independence, the United States provided secret development aid and helped the Social Democratic Party.[81]

After the war

Urho Kekkonen was Finland's longest-serving president in 1956–1982.
Establishing trade with the Western powers, such as the United Kingdom, and paying reparations to the Soviet Union produced a transformation of Finland from a primarily agrarian economy to an industrialized one. Valmet (originally a shipyard, then several metal workshops) was founded to create materials for war reparations. After the reparations had been paid off, Finland continued to trade with the Soviet Union in the framework of bilateral trade.

In 1950, 46% of Finnish workers worked in agriculture and a third lived in urban areas.[82] The new jobs in manufacturing, services, and trade quickly attracted people to the towns. The average number of births per woman declined from a baby boom peak of 3.5 in 1947 to 1.5 in 1973.[82] When baby boomers entered the workforce, the economy did not generate jobs quickly enough, and hundreds of thousands emigrated to the more industrialized Sweden, with emigration peaking in 1969 and 1970.[82] Finland took part in trade liberalization in the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.


The Finlandia Hall, designed by Alvar Aalto, where the president Urho Kekkonen hosted the Conference on Security and Co-operation in Europe in 1975.
Officially claiming to be neutral, Finland lay in the grey zone between the Western countries and the Soviet bloc during the Cold War. The military YYA Treaty (Finno-Soviet Pact of Friendship, Cooperation and Mutual Assistance) gave the Soviet Union some leverage in Finnish domestic politics. This was extensively exploited by president Urho Kekkonen against his opponents. He maintained an effective monopoly on Soviet relations from 1956 on, which was crucial for his continued popularity. In politics, there was a tendency to avoid any policies and statements that could be interpreted as anti-Soviet. This phenomenon was given the name "Finlandization" by the West German press.[83]

Finland maintained a market economy. Various industries benefited from trade privileges with the Soviets. Economic growth was rapid in the postwar era, and by 1975 Finland's GDP per capita was the 15th-highest in the world. In the 1970s and 1980s, Finland built one of the most extensive welfare states in the world. Finland negotiated with the European Economic Community (EEC, a predecessor of the European Union) a treaty that mostly abolished customs duties towards the EEC starting from 1977. In 1981, President Urho Kekkonen's failing health forced him to retire after holding office for 25 years.

Miscalculated macroeconomic decisions, a banking crisis, the collapse of its largest trading partner (the Soviet Union), and a global economic downturn caused a deep early 1990s recession in Finland. The depression bottomed out in 1993, and Finland saw steady economic growth for more than ten years.[84] After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Finland began increasing integration with the West.[85] Finland joined the European Union in 1995, and the Eurozone in 1999. Much of the late 1990s economic growth was fueled by the success of the mobile phone manufacturer Nokia.[42]

21st century

Prime Minister Sanna Marin and President Sauli Niinistö at the press conference announcing Finland's intent to apply to NATO on 15 May 2022
The Finnish population elected Tarja Halonen in the 2000 Presidential election, making her the first female President of Finland.[86] Financial crises paralyzed Finland's exports in 2008, resulting in weaker economic growth throughout the decade.[87][88] Sauli Niinistö has subsequently been elected the President of Finland since 2012.[89]

Finland's support for NATO rose enormously after the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. Prior to February 2022, polling showed a narrow but definitive majority in opposition to NATO membership;[90] by April, a supermajority were in favor of membership.[91][92][93][94] On 11 May 2022, Finland entered into a mutual security pact with the United Kingdom.[95] On 12 May, Finland's president and prime minister called for NATO membership "without delay".[96] Subsequently, on 17 May, the Parliament of Finland decided by a vote of 188–8 that it supported Finland's accession to NATO.[97] Finland became a member of NATO on 4 April 2023.[98]

Geography
Main article: Geography of Finland
See also: List of cities and towns in Finland, List of lakes of Finland, List of national parks of Finland, and Environmental issues in Finland

Topographic map of Finland

Northern lights are most common in Lapland in winter time.
Lying approximately between latitudes 60° and 70° N, and longitudes 20° and 32° E, Finland is one of the world's northernmost countries. Of world capitals, only Reykjavík lies more to the north than Helsinki. The distance from the southernmost point – Hanko in Uusimaa – to the northernmost – Nuorgam in Lapland – is 1,160 kilometres (720 mi).


Enontekiö which includes part of the Scandinavian Mountains
Finland has about 168,000 lakes (of area larger than 500 m2 or 0.12 acres) and 179,000 islands.[99] Its largest lake, Saimaa, is the fourth largest in Europe. The Finnish Lakeland is the area with the most lakes in the country; many of the major cities in the area, most notably Tampere, Jyväskylä and Kuopio, are located near the large lakes. The greatest concentration of islands is found in the southwest, in the Archipelago Sea between continental Finland and the main island of Åland.

Much of the geography of Finland is a result of the Ice Age. The glaciers were thicker and lasted longer in Fennoscandia compared with the rest of Europe. Their eroding effects have left the Finnish landscape mostly flat with few hills and fewer mountains. Its highest point, the Halti at 1,324 metres (4,344 ft), is found in the extreme north of Lapland at the border between Finland and Norway. The highest mountain whose peak is entirely in Finland is Ridnitšohkka at 1,316 m (4,318 ft), directly adjacent to Halti.


There are some 187,888 lakes in Finland larger than 500 square metres and 75,818 islands of over 0,5 km2 area, leading to the denomination "the land of a thousand lakes".[13] Picture of Lake Pielinen in North Karelia.
The retreating glaciers have left the land with morainic deposits in formations of eskers. These are ridges of stratified gravel and sand, running northwest to southeast, where the ancient edge of the glacier once lay. Among the biggest of these are the three Salpausselkä ridges that run across southern Finland.

Having been compressed under the enormous weight of the glaciers, terrain in Finland is rising due to the post-glacial rebound. The effect is strongest around the Gulf of Bothnia, where land steadily rises about 1 cm (0.4 in) a year. As a result, the old sea bottom turns little by little into dry land: the surface area of the country is expanding by about 7 square kilometres (2.7 sq mi) annually.[100] Relatively speaking, Finland is rising from the sea.[101]

The landscape is covered mostly by coniferous taiga forests and fens, with little cultivated land. Of the total area, 10% is lakes, rivers, and ponds, and 78% is forest. The forest consists of pine, spruce, birch, and other species.[102] Finland is the largest producer of wood in Europe and among the largest in the world. The most common type of rock is granite. It is a ubiquitous part of the scenery, visible wherever there is no soil cover. Moraine or till is the most common type of soil, covered by a thin layer of humus of biological origin. Podzol profile development is seen in most forest soils except where drainage is poor. Gleysols and peat bogs occupy poorly drained areas.

Biodiversity
Main articles: Fauna of Finland and Wildlife of Finland

In Finland, reindeer graze in Lapland area and on the fells.

In recent decades, wolverine populations have grown in Finland.

The brown bear is Finland's national animal.[103] It is also the largest carnivore in Finland.
Phytogeographically, Finland is shared between the Arctic, central European, and northern European provinces of the Circumboreal Region within the Boreal Kingdom. According to the WWF, the territory of Finland can be subdivided into three ecoregions: the Scandinavian and Russian taiga, Sarmatic mixed forests, and Scandinavian Montane Birch forest and grasslands.[104] Taiga covers most of Finland from northern regions of southern provinces to the north of Lapland. On the southwestern coast, south of the Helsinki-Rauma line, forests are characterized by mixed forests, that are more typical in the Baltic region. In the extreme north of Finland, near the tree line and Arctic Ocean, Montane Birch forests are common. Finland had a 2018 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 5.08/10, ranking it 109th globally out of 172 countries.[105]

Similarly, Finland has a diverse and extensive range of fauna. There are at least sixty native mammalian species, 248 breeding bird species, over 70 fish species, and 11 reptile and frog species present today, many migrating from neighbouring countries thousands of years ago. Large and widely recognized wildlife mammals found in Finland are the brown bear, grey wolf, wolverine, and elk. Three of the more striking birds are the whooper swan, a large European swan and the national bird of Finland; the Western capercaillie, a large, black-plumaged member of the grouse family; and the Eurasian eagle-owl. The latter is considered an indicator of old-growth forest connectivity, and has been declining because of landscape fragmentation.[106] Around 24,000 species of insects are prevalent in Finland some of the most common being hornets with tribes of beetles such as the Onciderini also being common. The most common breeding birds are the willow warbler, common chaffinch, and redwing.[107] Of some seventy species of freshwater fish, the northern pike, perch, and others are plentiful. Atlantic salmon remains the favourite of fly rod enthusiasts.

The endangered Saimaa ringed seal, one of only three lake seal species in the world, exists only in the Saimaa lake system of southeastern Finland, down to only 390 seals today.[108][109] The species has become the emblem of the Finnish Association for Nature Conservation.[110]

A third of Finland's land area originally consisted of moorland, about half of this area has been drained for cultivation over the past centuries.[111]

Climate
Main article: Climate of Finland

Köppen climate classification types of Finland
The main factor influencing Finland's climate is the country's geographical position between the 60th and 70th northern parallels in the Eurasian continent's coastal zone. In the Köppen climate classification, the whole of Finland lies in the boreal zone, characterized by warm summers and freezing winters. Within the country, the temperateness varies considerably between the southern coastal regions and the extreme north, showing characteristics of both a maritime and a continental climate. Finland is near enough to the Atlantic Ocean to be continuously warmed by the Gulf Stream. The Gulf Stream combines with the moderating effects of the Baltic Sea and numerous inland lakes to explain the unusually warm climate compared with other regions that share the same latitude, such as Alaska, Siberia, and southern Greenland.[112]

Winters in southern Finland (when mean daily temperature remains below 0 °C or 32 °F) are usually about 100 days long, and in the inland the snow typically covers the land from about late November to April, and on the coastal areas such as Helsinki, snow often covers the land from late December to late March.[113] Even in the south, the harshest winter nights can see the temperatures fall to −30 °C (−22 °F) although on coastal areas like Helsinki, temperatures below −30 °C (−22 °F) are rare. Climatic summers (when mean daily temperature remains above 10 °C or 50 °F) in southern Finland last from about late May to mid-September, and in the inland, the warmest days of July can reach over 35 °C (95 °F).[112] Although most of Finland lies on the taiga belt, the southernmost coastal regions are sometimes classified as hemiboreal.[114]

In northern Finland, particularly in Lapland, the winters are long and cold, while the summers are relatively warm but short. On the most severe winter days in Lapland can see the temperature fall to −45 °C (−49 °F). The winter of the north lasts for about 200 days with permanent snow cover from about mid-October to early May. Summers in the north are quite short, only two to three months, but can still see maximum daily temperatures above 25 °C (77 °F) during heat waves.[112] No part of Finland has Arctic tundra, but Alpine tundra can be found at the fells Lapland.[114]

The Finnish climate is suitable for cereal farming only in the southernmost regions, while the northern regions are suitable for animal husbandry.[115]

A quarter of Finland's territory lies within the Arctic Circle and the midnight sun can be experienced for more days the farther north one travels. At Finland's northernmost point, the sun does not set for 73 consecutive days during summer and does not rise at all for 51 days during winter.[112]

Regions
Main article: Regions of Finland
Finland consists of 19 regions (maakunta). The counties are governed by regional councils which serve as forums of cooperation for the municipalities of a county. The main tasks of the counties are regional planning and development of enterprise and education. In addition, the public health services are usually organized based on counties. Regional councils are elected by municipal councils, each municipality sending representatives in proportion to its population. In addition to inter-municipal cooperation, which is the responsibility of regional councils, each county has a state Employment and Economic Development Centre which is responsible for the local administration of labour, agriculture, fisheries, forestry, and entrepreneurial affairs. Historically, counties are divisions of historical provinces of Finland, areas that represent local dialects and culture more accurately.

Six Regional State Administrative Agencies are responsible for one of the counties called alue in Finnish; in addition, Åland was designated a seventh county.[116]

Regional map English name[117] Finnish name Swedish name Capital Regional state administrative agency

Lapland (Finland) LaplandNorthern Ostrobothnia North Ostrobothnia Kainuu North KareliaNorthern Savonia North SavoSouthern Savonia South SavoSouthern Ostrobothnia South OstrobothniaOstrobothnia (region) Ostrobothnia Central Ostrobothnia Central Finland Pirkanmaa SatakuntaFinland Proper Southwest FinlandTavastia Proper Kanta-HämePäijänne Tavastia Päijät-Häme South Karelia Kymenlaakso Uusimaa Åland
Lapland Lappi Lappland Rovaniemi Lapland
North Ostrobothnia Pohjois-Pohjanmaa Norra Österbotten Oulu Northern Finland
Kainuu Kainuu Kajanaland Kajaani Northern Finland
North Karelia Pohjois-Karjala Norra Karelen Joensuu Eastern Finland
North Savo Pohjois-Savo Norra Savolax Kuopio Eastern Finland
South Savo Etelä-Savo Södra Savolax Mikkeli Eastern Finland
South Ostrobothnia Etelä-Pohjanmaa Södra Österbotten Seinäjoki Western and Central Finland
Central Ostrobothnia Keski-Pohjanmaa Mellersta Österbotten Kokkola Western and Central Finland
Ostrobothnia Pohjanmaa Österbotten Vaasa Western and Central Finland
Pirkanmaa Pirkanmaa Birkaland Tampere Western and Central Finland
Central Finland Keski-Suomi Mellersta Finland Jyväskylä Western and Central Finland
Satakunta Satakunta Satakunta Pori South-Western Finland
Southwest Finland Varsinais-Suomi Egentliga Finland Turku South-Western Finland
South Karelia Etelä-Karjala Södra Karelen Lappeenranta Southern Finland
Päijät-Häme Päijät-Häme Päijänne-Tavastland Lahti Southern Finland
Kanta-Häme Kanta-Häme Egentliga Tavastland Hämeenlinna Southern Finland
Uusimaa Uusimaa Nyland Helsinki Southern Finland
Kymenlaakso Kymenlaakso Kymmenedalen Kotka and Kouvola Southern Finland
Åland[note 4] Ahvenanmaa Åland Mariehamn Åland
The county of Eastern Uusimaa (Itä-Uusimaa) was consolidated with Uusimaa on 1 January 2011.[118]

Administrative divisions
Main articles: Administrative divisions of Finland, Sub-regions of Finland, Municipalities of Finland, and Historical provinces of Finland

Municipalities (thin borders) and regions (thick borders) of Finland (2021)
The fundamental administrative divisions of the country are the municipalities, which may also call themselves towns or cities. They account for half of the public spending. Spending is financed by municipal income tax, state subsidies, and other revenue. As of 2021, there are 309 municipalities,[119] and most have fewer than 6,000 residents.

In addition to municipalities, two intermediate levels are defined. Municipalities co-operate in seventy sub-regions and nineteen counties. These are governed by the member municipalities and have only limited powers. The autonomous province of Åland has a permanent democratically elected regional council. Sami people have a semi-autonomous Sami native region in Lapland for issues on language and culture.

Health, social and emergency services are organised by the Wellbeing Services Counties. Finland has 21 Wellbeing Services Counties and the county structure is mainly based on the region structure. The County council, which is responsible for the operation, administration and finances of the welfare area, is the highest decision-making body in the welfare county. The delegates and deputy commissioners of the county council are elected in the county elections for a term of office of four years. Welfare districts are self-governing. However, they do not have the right to levy taxes and their funding is based on central government funding.[120]

The capital region – comprising Helsinki, Vantaa, Espoo and Kauniainen – forms a continuous conurbation of over 1.1 million people. However, common administration is limited to voluntary cooperation of all municipalities, e.g. in Helsinki Metropolitan Area Council.

Government and politics
Main articles: Politics of Finland and Finnish order of precedence

 Sauli Niinistö,
12th President
since 1 March 2012

 Petteri Orpo,
47th Prime Minister
since 20 June 2023

Finland is a member of:
  the Eurozone     the European Union
Constitution
The Constitution of Finland defines the political system; Finland is a parliamentary republic within the framework of a representative democracy. The Prime Minister is the country's most powerful person. Citizens can run and vote in parliamentary, municipal, presidential, and European Union elections.

President
Main article: President of Finland
Finland's head of state is the President of the Republic. Finland has had for most of its independence a semi-presidential system of government, but in the last few decades the powers of the President have become more circumscribed, and consequently the country is now considered a parliamentary republic.[4] A new constitution enacted in 2000, have made the presidency a primarily ceremonial office that appoints the Prime Minister as elected by Parliament, appoints and dismisses the other ministers of the Finnish Government on the recommendation of the Prime Minister, opens parliamentary sessions, and confers state honors. Nevertheless, the President remains responsible for Finland's foreign relations, including the making of war and peace, but excluding matters related to the European Union. Moreover, the President exercises supreme command over the Finnish Defence Forces as commander-in-chief. In the exercise of his or her foreign and defense powers, the President is required to consult the Finnish Government, but the Government's advice is not binding. In addition, the President has several domestic reserve powers, including the authority to veto legislation, to grant pardons, and to appoint several public officials. The President is also required by the Constitution to dismiss individual ministers or the entire Government upon a parliamentary vote of no confidence.[121]

The President is directly elected via runoff voting and may serve for a maximum of two consecutive 6-year terms. The current president is Sauli Niinistö, who took office on 1 March 2012. His predecessors were Kaarlo Juho Ståhlberg (1919–1925), Lauri Kristian Relander (1925–1931), Pehr Evind Svinhufvud (1931–1937), Kyösti Kallio (1937–1940), Risto Ryti (1940–1944), Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim (1944–1946), Juho Kusti Paasikivi (1946–1956), Urho Kekkonen (1956–1982), Mauno Koivisto (1982–1994), Martti Ahtisaari (1994–2000), and Tarja Halonen (2000–2012).

Parliament
Main article: Parliament of Finland

The Parliament of Finland's main building in Helsinki

The Session Hall of the Parliament of Finland
The 200-member unicameral Parliament of Finland (Finnish: Eduskunta) exercises supreme legislative authority in the country. It may alter the constitution and ordinary laws, dismiss the cabinet, and override presidential vetoes. Its acts are not subject to judicial review; the constitutionality of new laws is assessed by the parliament's constitutional law committee. The parliament is elected for a term of four years using the proportional D'Hondt method within several multi-seat constituencies through the most open list multi-member districts. Various parliament committees listen to experts and prepare legislation.

Significant parliamentary parties are Centre Party, Christian Democrats, Finns Party, Green League, Left Alliance, National Coalition Party, Social Democrats and Swedish People's Party.

Cabinet
Main article: Finnish Government
After parliamentary elections, the parties negotiate among themselves on forming a new cabinet (the Finnish Government), which then has to be approved by a simple majority vote in the parliament. The cabinet can be dismissed by a parliamentary vote of no confidence, although this rarely happens, as the parties represented in the cabinet usually make up a majority in the parliament.

The cabinet exercises most executive powers and originates most of the bills that the parliament then debates and votes on. It is headed by the Prime Minister of Finland, and consists of him or her, other ministers, and the Chancellor of Justice. Each minister heads his or her ministry, or, in some cases, has responsibility for a subset of a ministry's policy. After the prime minister, the most powerful minister is often the minister of finance.

As no one party ever dominates the parliament, Finnish cabinets are multi-party coalitions. As a rule, the post of prime minister goes to the leader of the biggest party and that of the minister of finance to the leader of the second biggest.

The Orpo Cabinet is the incumbent 77th government of Finland. It took office on 20 June 2023. The cabinet is headed by Petteri Orpo and is a coalition between the National Coalition Party, Finns Party, the Swedish People's Party, and the Christian Democrats.[122]

Law
Main articles: Law of Finland and Judicial system of Finland

The Court House of the Supreme Court
The judicial system of Finland is a civil law system divided between courts with regular civil and criminal jurisdiction and administrative courts with jurisdiction over litigation between individuals and the public administration. Finnish law is codified and based on Swedish law and in a wider sense, civil law or Roman law. The court system for civil and criminal jurisdiction consists of local courts, regional appellate courts, and the Supreme Court. The administrative branch of justice consists of administrative courts and the Supreme Administrative Court. In addition to the regular courts, there are a few special courts in certain branches of administration. There is also a High Court of Impeachment for criminal charges against certain high-ranking officeholders.

Around 92% of residents have confidence in Finland's security institutions.[123] The overall crime rate of Finland is not high in the EU context. Some crime types are above average, notably the high homicide rate for Western Europe.[124] A day fine system is in effect and also applied to offenses such as speeding. Finland has a very low number of corruption charges; Transparency International ranks Finland as one of the least corrupt countries in Europe.

Foreign relations
Main article: Foreign relations of Finland

Martti Ahtisaari receiving the Nobel Peace Prize in 2008
According to the 2012 constitution, the president (currently Sauli Niinistö) leads foreign policy in cooperation with the government, except that the president has no role in EU affairs.[125] In 2008, president Martti Ahtisaari was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.[126]

Finlands relationship with Russia deteriorated following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, with a number of Russians diplomats expelled for spying, Russians restricted from visiting Finland and the general opinion immediately changing for Finland to join NATO.[127]

Military
Main articles: Finnish Defence Forces, Military history of Finland, and Finland–NATO relations
See also: List of wars involving Finland and UK Joint Expeditionary Force
The Finnish Defence Forces consist of a cadre of professional soldiers (mainly officers and technical personnel), currently serving conscripts, and a large reserve. The standard readiness strength is 34,700 people in uniform, of which 25% are professional soldiers. A universal male conscription is in place, under which all male Finnish nationals above 18 years of age serve for 6 to 12 months of armed service or 12 months of civilian (non-armed) service. Voluntary post-conscription overseas peacekeeping service is popular, and troops serve around the world in UN, NATO, and EU missions. Women are allowed to serve in all combat arms. In 2022, 1211 women entered voluntary military service.[128] The army consists of a highly mobile field army backed up by local defence units. With a high capability of military personnel,[129] arsenal[130] and homeland defence willingness, Finland is one of Europe's militarily strongest countries.[131]


Sisu Nasu NA-110 tracked transport vehicle of the Finnish Army. Most conscripts receive training for warfare in winter, and transport vehicles such as this give mobility in heavy snow.
Finnish defence expenditure per capita is one of the highest in the European Union.[132] The branches of the military are the army, the navy, and the air force. The border guard is under the Ministry of the Interior but can be incorporated into the Defence Forces when required for defence readiness.

Finland became a member of NATO on 4 April 2023,[98] though it participated in the NATO Response Force before becoming a member. Finland also contributes to the EU Battlegroup.[133][134][135] Finland sent personnel to the Kosovo Force and the International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan.[136][137]

Social security
Main article: Social security in Finland
Finland has one of the world's most extensive welfare systems, one that guarantees decent living conditions for all residents. The welfare system was created almost entirely during the first three decades after World War II. Finland's history has been harsher than the histories of the other Nordic countries, but not harsh enough to bar the country from following its path of social development.[138]

Human rights
Main articles: Human rights in Finland, Women's suffrage in Finland, and LGBT rights in Finland
See also: Racism in Finland

People gathering at the Senate Square, Helsinki, right before the 2011 Helsinki Pride parade started
Section 6 of the Finnish Constitution states: "No one shall be placed in a different position on situation of sex, age, origin, language, religion, belief, opinion, state of health, disability or any other personal reason without an acceptable reason".[139]

Finland has been ranked above average among the world's countries in democracy,[140] press freedom,[141] and human development.[142] Amnesty International has expressed concern regarding some issues in Finland, such as the imprisonment of conscientious objectors, and societal discrimination against Romani people and members of other ethnic and linguistic minorities.[143][144]

In the report of the European umbrella organization ILGA-Europe published in May 2023, Finland ranked sixth in a European comparison of LGBTQ+ rights.[145]

Economy
Main article: Economy of Finland
See also: List of companies of Finland, List of largest companies in Finland, and Helsinki Stock Exchange
As of 2022, Finland has the 16th highest nominal GDP per capita in the world according to the IMF.

In addition to the fact that Finland is one of the richest countries in the world, it is known for its well-developed welfare system, which includes free education and a universal health care system.

The largest sector of the economy is the service sector at 66% of GDP, followed by manufacturing and refining at 31%. Primary production represents 2.9%.[146] With respect to foreign trade, the key economic sector is manufacturing. The largest industries in 2007[147] were electronics (22%); machinery, vehicles, and other engineered metal products (21.1%); forest industry (13%); and chemicals (11%). The gross domestic product peaked in 2021.[148] Finland is ranked as the 9th most innovative country in the Global Innovation Index in 2022.[149]

Finland has significant timber, mineral (iron, chromium, copper, nickel, and gold), and freshwater resources. Forestry, paper factories, and the agricultural sector are important for rural residents. The Greater Helsinki area generates around one-third of Finland's GDP. Private services are the largest employer in Finland.

Finland's climate and soils make growing crops a particular challenge. The country has severe winters and relatively short growing seasons that are sometimes interrupted by frost. However, because the Gulf Stream and the North Atlantic Drift Current moderate the climate, Finland contains half of the world's arable land north of 60° north latitude. Annual precipitation is usually sufficient, but it occurs almost exclusively during the winter months, making summer droughts a constant threat. In response to the climate, farmers have relied on quick-ripening and frost-resistant varieties of crops, and they have cultivated south-facing slopes as well as richer bottomlands to ensure production even in years with summer frosts. Drainage systems are often needed to remove excess water. Finland's agriculture has been efficient and productive—at least when compared with farming in other European countries.[138]


A treemap representing the exports of Finland in 2017
Forests play a key role in the country's economy, making it one of the world's leading wood producers and providing raw materials at competitive prices for the crucial wood processing industries. As in agriculture, the government has long played a leading role in forestry, regulating tree cutting, sponsoring technical improvements, and establishing long-term plans to ensure that the country's forests continue to supply the wood-processing industries.[138]

As of 2008, average purchasing power-adjusted income levels are similar to those of Italy, Sweden, Germany, and France.[150] In 2006, 62% of the workforce worked for enterprises with less than 250 employees and they accounted for 49% of total business turnover.[151] The female employment rate is high. Gender segregation between male-dominated professions and female-dominated professions is higher than in the US.[152] The proportion of part-time workers was one of the lowest in OECD in 1999.[152] In 2013, the 10 largest private sector employers in Finland were Itella, Nokia, OP-Pohjola, ISS, VR, Kesko, UPM-Kymmene, YIT, Metso, and Nordea.[153] The unemployment rate was 6.8% in 2022.[154]

As of 2022, 46% of households consist of a single person, 32% two persons and 22% three or more persons.[155] The average residential space is 40 square metres (430 sq ft) per person.[156] In 2021, Finland's GDP reached €251  billion.[148] In 2022, altogether 74 per cent of employed persons worked in services and administration, 21 per cent in industry and construction, and four per cent in agriculture and forestry.[157]

Finland has the highest concentration of cooperatives relative to its population.[158] The largest retailer, which is also the largest private employer, S-Group, and the largest bank, OP-Group, in the country are both cooperatives.

Energy
See also: Nordic energy market, Peat energy in Finland, and Nuclear power in Finland

The Olkiluoto Nuclear Power Plant. Finland has five commercial nuclear reactors.[159]
The free and largely privately owned financial and physical Nordic energy markets traded in NASDAQ OMX Commodities Europe and Nord Pool Spot exchanges, have provided competitive prices compared with other EU countries. As of 2022, Finland has the lowest non-household electricity prices in the EU.[160]

In 2021, the energy market was around 87 terawatt hours and the peak demand around 14 gigawatts in winter.[161][162] Industry and construction consumed 43.5% of total consumption, a relatively high figure reflecting Finland's industries.[161] Finland's hydrocarbon resources are limited to peat and wood. About 18% of the electricity is produced by hydropower[161] In 2021, renewable energy (mainly hydropower and various forms of wood energy) was high at 43% compared with the EU average of 22% in final energy consumption.[163] About 20% of electricity is imported, especially from Sweden due to its lower cost there.[164] As of February 2022, Finland's strategic petroleum reserves held 200 days worth of net oil imports in the case of emergencies.[165]


Supply of electricity in Finland[166]
Finland has five privately owned nuclear reactors producing 40% of the country's energy.[159] The Onkalo spent nuclear fuel repository is currently under construction at the Olkiluoto Nuclear Power Plant in the municipality of Eurajoki, on the west coast of Finland, by the company Posiva.[167]

Transport
Main article: Transport in Finland

A VR Class Sr2 locomotive. The state-owned VR operates a railway network serving all major cities in Finland.

A Finnair airplane in Helsinki Airport
Finland's road system is utilized by most internal cargo and passenger traffic. The annual state operated road network expenditure of around €1  billion is paid for with vehicle and fuel taxes which amount to around €1.5  billion and €1  billion, respectively. Among the Finnish highways, the most significant and busiest main roads include the Turku Highway (E18), the Tampere Highway (E12), the Lahti Highway (E75), and the ring roads (Ring I and Ring III) of the Helsinki metropolitan area and the Tampere Ring Road of the Tampere urban area.[168]

The main international passenger gateway is Helsinki Airport, which handled about 21 million passengers in 2019 (5 million in 2020 due to COVID-19 pandemic). Oulu Airport is the second largest with 1 million passengers in 2019 (300,000 in 2020), whilst another 25 airports have scheduled passenger services.[169] The Helsinki Airport-based Finnair, Blue1, and Nordic Regional Airlines, Norwegian Air Shuttle sell air services both domestically and internationally.

The Government annually spends around €350  million to maintain the 5,865-kilometre-long (3,644 mi) network of railway tracks. Rail transport is handled by the state-owned VR Group.[170] Finland's first railway was opened in 1862,[171][172] and today it forms part of the Finnish Main Line, which is more than 800 kilometers long. Helsinki opened the world's northernmost metro system in 1982.

The majority of international cargo shipments are handled at ports. Vuosaari Harbour in Helsinki is the largest container port in Finland; others include Kotka, Hamina, Hanko, Pori, Rauma, and Oulu. There is passenger traffic from Helsinki and Turku, which have ferry connections to Tallinn, Mariehamn, Stockholm and Travemünde. The Helsinki-Tallinn route is one of the busiest passenger sea routes in the world.[173]

Industry
Main article: Economy of Finland

The Oasis of the Seas was built at the Perno shipyard in Turku.
Finland rapidly industrialized after World War II, achieving GDP per capita levels comparable to that of Japan or the UK at the beginning of the 1970s. Initially, most of the economic development was based on two broad groups of export-led industries, the "metal industry" (metalliteollisuus) and "forest industry" (metsäteollisuus). The "metal industry" includes shipbuilding, metalworking, the automotive industry, engineered products such as motors and electronics, and production of metals and alloys including steel, copper and chromium. Many of the world's biggest cruise ships, including MS Freedom of the Seas and the Oasis of the Seas have been built in Finnish shipyards.[174] [175] The "forest industry" includes forestry, timber, pulp and paper, and is often considered a logical development based on Finland's extensive forest resources, as 73% of the area is covered by forest. In the pulp and paper industry, many major companies are based in Finland; Ahlstrom-Munksjö, Metsä Board, and UPM are all Finnish forest-based companies with revenues exceeding €1 billion. However, in recent decades, the Finnish economy has diversified, with companies expanding into fields such as electronics (Nokia), metrology (Vaisala), petroleum (Neste), and video games (Rovio Entertainment), and is no longer dominated by the two sectors of metal and forest industry. Likewise, the structure has changed, with the service sector growing. Despite this, production for export is still more prominent than in Western Europe, thus making Finland possibly more vulnerable to global economic trends.

In 2017, the Finnish economy was estimated to consist of approximately 2.7% agriculture, 28.2% manufacturing, and 69.1% services.[176] In 2019, the per-capita income of Finland was estimated to be $48,869. In 2020, Finland was ranked 20th on the ease of doing business index, among 190 jurisdictions.

Public policy
See also: Nordic model

Flags of the Nordic countries and Åland from left to right: Iceland, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Åland
Finnish politicians have often emulated the Nordic model.[177] Nordics have been free-trading for over a century. The level of protection in commodity trade has been low, except for agricultural products.[177] Finland is ranked 16th in the 2008 global Index of Economic Freedom and ninth in Europe.[178] According to the OECD, only four EU-15 countries have less regulated product markets and only one has less regulated financial markets.[177] The 2007 IMD World Competitiveness Yearbook ranked Finland 17th most competitive.[179] The World Economic Forum 2008 index ranked Finland the sixth most competitive.[180]

The legal system is clear and business bureaucracy less than most countries.[178] Property rights are well protected and contractual agreements are strictly honoured.[178] Finland is rated the least corrupt country in the world in the Corruption Perceptions Index[181] and 13th in the Ease of doing business index.[182]

In Finland, collective labour agreements are universally valid. These are drafted every few years for each profession and seniority level, with only a few jobs outside the system. The agreement becomes universally enforceable provided that more than 50% of the employees support it, in practice by being a member of a relevant trade union. The unionization rate is high (70%), especially in the middle class (AKAVA, mostly for university-educated professionals: 80%).[177]

Tourism
Main article: Tourism in Finland

The historical Tavastia Castle (or Häme Castle) in Hämeenlinna, Tavastia Proper, is located close to the Lake Vanajavesi.[183]

Old Rauma, the wooden centre of the town of Rauma
In 2017, tourism in Finland grossed approximately €15.0 billion. Of this, €4.6 billion (30%) came from foreign tourism.[184] In 2017, there were 15.2 million overnight stays of domestic tourists and 6.7 million overnight stays of foreign tourists.[185] Tourism contributes roughly 2.7% to Finland's GDP.[186]

Lapland has the highest tourism consumption of any Finnish region.[186] Above the Arctic Circle, in midwinter, there is a polar night, a period when the sun does not rise for days or weeks, or even months, and correspondingly, midnight sun in the summer, with no sunset even at midnight (for up to 73 consecutive days, at the northernmost point). Lapland is so far north that the aurora borealis, fluorescence in the high atmosphere due to solar wind, is seen regularly in the fall, winter, and spring. Finnish Lapland is also locally regarded as the home of Santa Claus, with several theme parks, such as Santa Claus Village and Santa Park in Rovaniemi.[187] Other significant tourist destinations in Lapland also include ski resorts (such as Levi, Ruka and Ylläs)[188] and sleigh rides led by either reindeer or huskies.[189][190]

Tourist attractions in Finland include the natural landscape found throughout the country as well as urban attractions. Finland contains 40 national parks (such as Koli National Park in North Karelia), from the Southern shores of the Gulf of Finland to the high fells of Lapland. Outdoor activities range from Nordic skiing, golf, fishing, yachting, lake cruises, hiking, and kayaking, among many others. Bird-watching is popular for those fond of avifauna, however, hunting is also popular.

The most famous tourist attractions in Helsinki include the Helsinki Cathedral and the Suomenlinna sea fortress. The most well-known Finnish amusement parks include Linnanmäki in Helsinki and Särkänniemi in Tampere.[191] St. Olaf's Castle (Olavinlinna) in Savonlinna hosts the annual Savonlinna Opera Festival,[192] and the medieval milieus of the cities of Turku, Rauma and Porvoo also attract spectators.[193] Commercial cruises between major coastal and port cities in the Baltic region play a significant role in the local tourism industry.

Demographics
Main article: Demographics of Finland
Population by ethnic background in 2021[1][2]

  Finnish (91.54%)
  Other European (4.12%)
  Asian (2.77%)
  African (1.09%)
  Others (0.48%)
The population of Finland is currently about 5.5 million. The current birth rate is 10.42 per 1,000 residents, for a fertility rate of 1.49 children born per woman,[194] one of the lowest in the world, significantly below the replacement rate of 2.1. In 1887 Finland recorded its highest rate, 5.17 children born per woman.[195] Finland has one of the oldest populations in the world, with a median age of 42.6 years.[196] Approximately half of voters are estimated to be over 50 years old.[197][82][198][199] Finland has an average population density of 18 inhabitants per square kilometre. This is the third-lowest population density of any European country, behind those of Norway and Iceland, and the lowest population density of any European Union member country. Finland's population has always been concentrated in the southern parts of the country, a phenomenon that became even more pronounced during 20th-century urbanization. Two of the three largest cities in Finland are situated in the Greater Helsinki metropolitan area—Helsinki and Espoo.[200] In the largest cities of Finland, Tampere holds the third place after Helsinki and Espoo while also Helsinki-neighbouring Vantaa is the fourth. Other cities with population over 100,000 are Turku, Oulu, Jyväskylä, Kuopio, and Lahti.

Finland's immigrant population is growing.[201] As of 2022, there were 508,173 people with a foreign background living in Finland (9.1% of the population), most of whom are from the former Soviet Union, Estonia, Somalia, Iraq and former Yugoslavia.[202] The children of foreigners are not automatically given Finnish citizenship, as Finnish nationality law practices and maintain jus sanguinis policy where only children born to at least one Finnish parent are granted citizenship. If they are born in Finland and cannot get citizenship of any other country, they become citizens.[203] Additionally, certain persons of Finnish descent who reside in countries that were once part of Soviet Union, retain the right of return, a right to establish permanent residency in the country, which would eventually entitle them to qualify for citizenship.[204] 476,857 people in Finland in 2022 were born in another country, representing 8,6 % of the population. The 10 largest foreign born groups are (in order) from Russia, Estonia, Sweden, Iraq, China, Somalia, Thailand, India, Vietnam and Turkey.[205]

Language
Main articles: Finnish language, Finland Swedish, and Languages of Finland
See also: List of municipalities of Finland in which Finnish is not the sole official language

Municipalities of Finland:
  unilingually Finnish
  bilingual with Finnish as majority language, Swedish as minority language
  bilingual with Swedish as majority language, Finnish as minority language
  unilingually Swedish
  bilingual with Finnish as majority language, Sami as minority language
Finnish and Swedish are the official languages of Finland. Finnish predominates nationwide while Swedish is spoken in some coastal areas in the west and south (with towns such as Ekenäs,[206] Pargas,[207] Närpes,[207] Kristinestad,[208] Jakobstad[209] and Nykarleby.[210]) and in the autonomous region of Åland, which is the only monolingual Swedish-speaking region in Finland.[211] The native language of 87.3% of the population is Finnish,[212][213] which is part of the Finnic subgroup of the Uralic language. The language is one of only four official EU languages not of Indo-European origin, and has no relation through descent to the other national languages of the Nordics. Conversely, Finnish is closely related to Estonian and Karelian, and more distantly to Hungarian and the Sami languages.

Swedish is the native language of 5.2% of the population (Swedish-speaking Finns).[214] Swedish is a compulsory school subject and general knowledge of the language is good among many non-native speakers.[215] Likewise, a majority of Swedish-speaking non-Ålanders can speak Finnish.[216] The Finnish side of the land border with Sweden is unilingually Finnish-speaking. The Swedish across the border is distinct from the Swedish spoken in Finland. There is a sizeable pronunciation difference between the varieties of Swedish spoken in the two countries, although their mutual intelligibility is nearly universal.[217]

Finnish Romani is spoken by some 5,000–6,000 people; Romani and Finnish Sign Language are also recognized in the constitution. There are two sign languages: Finnish Sign Language, spoken natively by 4,000–5,000 people,[218] and Finland-Swedish Sign Language, spoken natively by about 150 people. Tatar is spoken by a Finnish Tatar minority of about 800 people whose ancestors moved to Finland mainly during Russian rule from the 1870s to the 1920s.[219]

The Sámi languages have an official status in parts of Lapland, where the Sámi, numbering around 7,000,[220] are recognized as an indigenous people. About a quarter of them speak a Sami language as their mother tongue.[221] The Sami languages that are spoken in Finland are Northern Sami, Inari Sami, and Skolt Sami.[note 5] The rights of minority groups (in particular Sami, Swedish speakers, and Romani people) are protected by the constitution.[222] The Nordic languages and Karelian are also specially recognized in parts of Finland.

The largest immigrant languages are Russian (1.6%), Estonian (0.9%), Arabic (0.7%), English (0.5%) and Somali (0.4%).[223]

English is studied by most pupils as a compulsory subject from the first grade (at seven years of age), formerly from the third or fifth grade, in the comprehensive school (in some schools other languages can be chosen instead).[224][225][226][227] German, French, Spanish and Russian can be studied as second foreign languages from the fourth grade (at 10 years of age; some schools may offer other options).[228]

Largest cities
  
Largest cities or towns in Finland
"Population and Society". Statistics Finland. 31 December 2022.
Rank Name Region Pop. Rank Name Region Pop.
1 Helsinki Uusimaa 665,558 11 Kouvola Kymenlaakso 79,309
2 Espoo Uusimaa 306,792 12 Joensuu North Karelia 77,480
3 Tampere Pirkanmaa 249,720 13 Lappeenranta South Karelia 72,595
4 Vantaa Uusimaa 243,496 14 Hämeenlinna Kanta-Häme 68,011
5 Oulu North Ostrobothnia 212,127 15 Vaasa Ostrobothnia 68,049
6 Turku Southwest Finland 198,211 16 Seinäjoki South Ostrobothnia 65,377
7 Jyväskylä Central Finland 145,962 17 Rovaniemi Lapland 64,547
8 Kuopio North Savo 122,615 18 Mikkeli South Savo 51,976
9 Lahti Päijät-Häme 120,211 19 Porvoo Uusimaa 51,265
10 Pori Satakunta 83,171 20 Salo Southwest Finland 50,966
Religion
Main article: Religion in Finland
Religions in Finland (2019)[229]

  Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland (68.72%)
  Orthodox Church (1.10%)
  Other Christian (0.93%)
  Other religions (0.76%)
  Unaffiliated (28.49%)
With 3.9 million members,[230] the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland is Finland's largest religious body; at the end of 2019, 68.7% of Finns were members of the church.[231] The Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland has seen its share of the country's population declining by roughly one percent annually in recent years.[231] The decline has been due to both church membership resignations and falling baptism rates.[232][233] The second largest group, accounting for 26.3% of the population[231] in 2017, has no religious affiliation. A small minority belongs to the Finnish Orthodox Church (1.1%). Other Protestant denominations and the Roman Catholic Church are significantly smaller, as are the Jewish and other non-Christian communities (totalling 1.6%). The Pew Research Center estimated the Muslim population at 2.7% in 2016.[234]

Finland's state church was the Church of Sweden until 1809. As an autonomous Grand Duchy under Russia from 1809 to 1917, Finland retained the Lutheran State Church system, and the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland was established. After Finland had gained independence in 1917, religious freedom was declared in the constitution of 1919, and a separate law on religious freedom in 1922. Through this arrangement, the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland gained a constitutional status as a national church alongside the Finnish Orthodox Church, whose position however is not codified in the constitution. The main Lutheran and Orthodox churches have special roles such as in state ceremonies and schools.[235]


The Evangelical Lutheran Temppeliaukio Church in Helsinki
In 2016, 69.3% of Finnish children were baptized[236] and 82.3% were confirmed in 2012 at the age of 15,[237] and over 90% of the funerals are Christian. However, the majority of Lutherans attend church only for special occasions like Christmas ceremonies, weddings, and funerals. The Lutheran Church estimates that approximately 1.8% of its members attend church services weekly.[238] The average number of church visits per year by church members is approximately two.[239]

According to a 2010 Eurobarometer poll, 33% of Finnish citizens responded that they "believe there is a God"; 42% answered that they "believe there is some sort of spirit or life force"; and 22% that they "do not believe there is any sort of spirit, God, or life force".[240] According to ISSP survey data (2008), 8% consider themselves "highly religious", and 31% "moderately religious". In the same survey, 28% reported themselves as "agnostic" and 29% as "non-religious".[241]

Health
Main article: Healthcare in Finland
See also: COVID-19 pandemic in Finland

A man donating blood at Finnish Red Cross Blood Service [fi]
Life expectancy was 79 years for men and 84 years for women in 2017.[242] The under-five mortality rate was 2.3 per 1,000 live births in 2017, ranking Finland's rate among the lowest in the world.[243] The fertility rate in 2014 stood at 1.71 children born/per woman and has been below the replacement rate of 2.1 since 1969.[244] With a low birth rate women also become mothers at a later age, the mean age at first live birth being 28.6 in 2014.[244] A 2011 study published in The Lancet medical journal found that Finland had the lowest stillbirth rate out of 193 countries.[245]

There has been a slight increase or no change in welfare and health inequalities between population groups in the 21st century. Lifestyle-related diseases are on the rise. More than half a million Finns suffer from diabetes, type 1 diabetes being globally the most common in Finland. Many children are diagnosed with type 2 diabetes. The number of musculoskeletal diseases and cancers are increasing, although the cancer prognosis has improved. Allergies and dementia are also growing health problems in Finland. One of the most common reasons for work disability are due to mental disorders, in particular depression.[246] The suicide rates were 13 per 100 000 in 2017, close to the North European average.[247] Suicide rates are still among the highest among developed countries in the OECD.[248]

There are 307 residents for each doctor.[249] About 19% of health care is funded directly by households and 77% by taxation.

In April 2012, Finland was ranked second in Gross National Happiness in a report published by The Earth Institute.[250] Since 2012, Finland has every time ranked at least in the top 5 of world's happiest countries in the annual World Happiness Report by the United Nations,[251][252][253] as well as ranking as the happiest country in 2018.[254]

Education and science
Main article: Education in Finland

Helsinki Central Library Oodi was chosen as the best new public library in the world in 2019.[255]
Most pre-tertiary education is arranged at the municipal level. Around 3 percent of students are enrolled in private schools (mostly specialist language and international schools).[256] Formal education is usually started at the age of 7. Primary school takes normally six years and lower secondary school three years.

The curriculum is set by the Ministry of Education and Culture and the Education Board. Education is compulsory between the ages of 7 and 18. After lower secondary school, graduates may apply to trade schools or gymnasiums (upper secondary schools). Trade schools offer a vocational education: approximately 40% of an age group choose this path after the lower secondary school.[257] Academically oriented gymnasiums have higher entrance requirements and specifically prepare for Abitur and tertiary education. Graduation from either formally qualifies for tertiary education.

In tertiary education, two mostly separate and non-interoperating sectors are found: the profession-oriented polytechnics and the research-oriented universities. Education is free and living expenses are to a large extent financed by the government through student benefits. There are 15 universities and 24 Universities of Applied Sciences (UAS) in the country.[258][259] The University of Helsinki is ranked 75th in the Top University Ranking of 2010.[260] Other reputable universities of Finland include Aalto University in Espoo, both University of Turku and Åbo Akademi University in Turku, University of Jyväskylä, University of Oulu, LUT University in Lappeenranta and Lahti, University of Eastern Finland in Kuopio and Joensuu, and Tampere University.[261]


Linus Torvalds, the Finnish software engineer best known for creating the popular open-source kernel Linux
The World Economic Forum ranks Finland's tertiary education No. 1 in the world.[262] Around 33% of residents have a tertiary degree, similar to Nordics and more than in most other OECD countries except Canada (44%), United States (38%) and Japan (37%).[263] In addition, 38% of Finland's population has a university or college degree, which is among the highest percentages in the world.[264][265] Adult education appears in several forms, such as secondary evening schools, civic and workers' institutes, study centres, vocational course centres, and folk high schools.[138]

More than 30% of tertiary graduates are in science-related fields. Forest improvement, materials research, environmental sciences, neural networks, low-temperature physics, brain research, biotechnology, genetic technology, and communications showcase fields of study where Finnish researchers have had a significant impact.[266] Finland is highly productive in scientific research. In 2005, Finland had the fourth most scientific publications per capita of the OECD countries.[267] In 2007, 1,801 patents were filed in Finland.[268]

Culture
Main article: Culture of Finland
See also: Finnish national symbols
Literature
Main article: Finnish literature

Writer and artist Tove Jansson
Written Finnish could be said to have existed since Mikael Agricola translated the New Testament into Finnish during the Protestant Reformation, but few notable works of literature were written until the 19th century and the beginning of a Finnish national Romantic Movement. This prompted Elias Lönnrot to collect Finnish and Karelian folk poetry and arrange and publish them as the Kalevala, the Finnish national epic. The era saw a rise of poets and novelists who wrote in Finnish, notably the national writer of Finland, Aleksis Kivi (The Seven Brothers), and Minna Canth, Eino Leino, and Juhani Aho. Many writers of the national awakening wrote in Swedish, such as the national poet J. L. Runeberg (The Tales of Ensign Stål) and Zachris Topelius.

After Finland became independent, there was a rise of modernist writers, most famously the Swedish-speaking poet Edith Södergran. Finnish-speaking authors explored national and historical themes. Most famous of them were Frans Eemil Sillanpää, who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1939, historical novelist Mika Waltari, and Väinö Linna with his The Unknown Soldier and Under the North Star trilogy. Beginning with Paavo Haavikko, Finnish poetry adopted modernism. Besides Lönnrot's Kalevala and Waltari, the Swedish-speaking Tove Jansson, best known as the creator of The Moomins, is the most translated Finnish writer;[269] her books have been translated into more than 40 languages.[270]

Visual arts, design, and architecture
See also: Architecture of Finland and Finnish art

Akseli Gallen-Kallela, The Defense of the Sampo, 1896, Turku Art Museum
The visual arts in Finland started to form their characteristics in the 19th century when Romantic nationalism was rising in autonomic Finland. The best known Finnish painters, Akseli Gallen-Kallela, started painting in a naturalist style but moved to national romanticism. Other notable painters of the era include Pekka Halonen, Eero Järnefelt, Helene Schjerfbeck and Hugo Simberg. In the late 20th century, the homoerotic art of Touko Laaksonen, pseudonym Tom of Finland, found a worldwide audience.[271][272]

Finland's best-known sculptor of the 20th century was Wäinö Aaltonen, remembered for his monumental busts and sculptures. The works of Eila Hiltunen and Laila Pullinen exemplifies the modernism in sculpture.

Finns have made major contributions to handicrafts and industrial design: among the internationally renowned figures are Timo Sarpaneva, Tapio Wirkkala and Ilmari Tapiovaara. Finnish architecture is famous around the world, and has contributed significantly to several styles internationally, such as Jugendstil (or Art Nouveau), Nordic Classicism and functionalism. Among the top 20th-century Finnish architects to gain international recognition are Eliel Saarinen and his son Eero Saarinen. Architect Alvar Aalto is regarded as among the most important 20th-century designers in the world;[273] he helped bring functionalist architecture to Finland, but soon was a pioneer in its development towards an organic style.[274] Aalto is also famous for his work in furniture, lamps, textiles, and glassware, which were usually incorporated into his buildings.

Music
Main articles: Music of Finland, Rock music in Finland, and Sami music

The kantele is Finland's national and traditional instrument.
Folk
Finnish folk music can be divided into Nordic dance music and the older tradition of poem singing, poems from which the national epic, the Kalevala, was created. Much of Finland's classical music is influenced by traditional Finnish and Karelian melodies and lyrics, as comprised in the Kalevala. In the historical region of Finnish Karelia, as well as other parts of Eastern Finland, the old poem singing traditions were preserved better than in the western parts of the country, thus Karelian culture is perceived as less influenced by Germanic influence than the Nordic folk dance music that largely replaced the kalevaic tradition. Finnish folk music has undergone a roots revival and has become a part of popular music. The people of northern Finland, Sweden, and Norway, the Sami, are known primarily for highly spiritual songs called joik.

Classical

The Finnish composer Jean Sibelius (1865–1957) was a significant figure in the history of classical music.
The first Finnish opera was written by the German-born composer Fredrik Pacius in 1852. Pacius also wrote the music to the poem Maamme/Vårt land (Our Country), Finland's national anthem. In the 1890s Finnish nationalism based on the Kalevala spread, and Jean Sibelius became famous for his vocal symphony Kullervo. In 1899 he composed Finlandia, which played an important role in Finland gaining independence. He remains one of Finland's most popular national figures.

Alongside Sibelius, the distinct Finnish style of music was created by Oskar Merikanto, Toivo Kuula, Erkki Melartin, Leevi Madetoja and Uuno Klami. Important modernist composers include Einojuhani Rautavaara, Aulis Sallinen and Magnus Lindberg, among others. Kaija Saariaho was ranked the world's greatest living composer in a 2019 composers' poll.[275] Many Finnish musicians have achieved international success. Among them are the conductor Esa-Pekka Salonen, the opera singer Karita Mattila and the violinist Pekka Kuusisto.

Popular music

Perttu Kivilaakso of Apocalyptica
Iskelmä (coined directly from the German word Schlager, meaning "hit") is a traditional Finnish word for a light popular song.[276] Finnish popular music also includes various kinds of dance music; tango, a style of Argentine music, is also popular.[277] The light music in Swedish-speaking areas has more influences from Sweden. At least a couple of Finnish polkas are known worldwide, such as Säkkijärven polkka[278] and Ievan polkka.[279]

During the 1970s, progressive rock group Wigwam and rock and roll group Hurriganes gained respect abroad. The Finnish punk scene produced some internationally acknowledged names including Terveet Kädet in the 1980s. Hanoi Rocks was a pioneering glam rock act.[280] Many Finnish metal bands have gained international recognition; Finland has been often called the "Promised Land of Heavy Metal" because there are more than 50 metal Bands for every 100,000 inhabitants – more than any other nation in the world.[281][282] Modern Finnish popular music includes a number of prominent pop musicians, jazz musicians, hip hop performers, and dance music acts.[283][284][285][286]

Finland has won the Eurovision Song Contest once in 2006 when Lordi won the contest with the song ''Hard Rock Hallelujah''.[287] The Finnish pop artist Käärijä also got second place in the contest in 2023 with his worldwide hit song ''Cha Cha Cha''.[288][289]

Cinema and television
Main articles: Cinema of Finland and Television in Finland
See also: Lists of Finnish films
Aki Kaurismäki in 2012
Film director Aki Kaurismäki
In the film industry, notable modern directors include brothers Mika and Aki Kaurismäki, Dome Karukoski, Antti Jokinen, Jalmari Helander, and Renny Harlin. Around twelve feature films are made each year.[290] Some Finnish drama series are internationally known, such as Bordertown.[291]

One of the most internationally successful Finnish films are The White Reindeer, directed by Erik Blomberg in 1952, which won the Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Film in 1956;[292][293] The Man Without a Past, directed by Aki Kaurismäki in 2002, which was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 2002 and won the Grand Prix at the 2002 Cannes Film Festival;[294] and The Fencer, directed by Klaus Härö in 2015, which was nominated for the 73rd Golden Globe Awards in the Best Foreign Language Film category as a Finnish/German/Estonian co-production.[295]

In Finland, the most significant films include The Unknown Soldier, directed by Edvin Laine in 1955.[296] Here, Beneath the North Star from 1968, is also one of the most significant works in Finnish history.[297] A 1960 crime comedy film Inspector Palmu's Mistake, directed by Matti Kassila, was voted in 2012 the best Finnish film of all time by Finnish film critics and journalists,[298] but the 1984 comedy film Uuno Turhapuro in the Army, the ninth film in Uuno Turhapuro film series, remains Finland's most seen domestic film made since 1968 by Finnish audience.[299]

Media and communications

Sanomatalo houses several offices of newspapers and radio stations.
Today, there are around 200 newspapers, 320 popular magazines, 2,100 professional magazines, and 67 commercial radio stations. The largest newspaper is Helsingin Sanomat, its circulation being 339,437 as of 2019.[300] Yle, the Finnish Broadcasting Company, operates five television channels and thirteen radio channels. Each year, around 12,000 book titles are published.[290]

Thanks to its emphasis on transparency and equal rights, Finland's press has been rated the freest in the world.[301] Worldwide, Finns, along with other Nordic peoples and the Japanese, spend the most time reading newspapers.[302] In regards to telecommunication infrastructure, Finland is the highest ranked country in the World Economic Forum's Network Readiness Index (NRI) – an indicator for determining the development level of a country's information and communication technologies.[303]

Sauna
Main article: Finnish sauna

A smoke sauna in Ruka, Kuusamo
The Finns' love for saunas is generally associated with Finnish cultural tradition in the world. Sauna is a type of dry steam bath practiced widely in Finland, which is especially evident in the strong tradition around Midsummer and Christmas. The word sauna is of Proto-Finnish origin (found in Finnic and Sami languages) dating back 7,000 years.[304] Steam baths have been part of European tradition elsewhere as well, but the sauna has survived best in Finland, in addition to Sweden, Estonia, Latvia, Russia, Norway, and parts of the United States and Canada. Moreover, nearly all Finnish houses have either their own sauna or in multi-story apartment houses, a timeshare sauna. Municipal swimming halls and hotels have often their own saunas. The Finnish sauna culture is inscribed on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists.[305][306]

Cuisine
Main article: Finnish cuisine

Karelian pasty (karjalanpiirakka) is a traditional Finnish dish made from a thin rye crust with a filling of rice.
Finnish cuisine generally combines traditional country fare and contemporary style cooking. Potato, meat and fish play a prominent role in traditional Finnish dishes. Finnish foods often use wholemeal products (rye, barley, oats) and berries (such as bilberries, lingonberries, cloudberries, and sea buckthorn). Milk and its derivatives like buttermilk are commonly used as food and drink. The most popular fish food in Finland is salmon.[307][308]

Finland has the world's second highest per capita consumption of coffee.[309] Milk consumption is also high, at an average of about 112 litres (25 imp gal; 30 US gal), per person, per year,[310] even though 17% of the Finns are lactose intolerant.[311]

Public holidays
Main articles: Public holidays in Finland and Flag flying days in Finland
There are several holidays in Finland, of which perhaps the most characteristic of Finnish culture include Christmas (joulu), Midsummer (juhannus), May Day (vappu) and Independence Day (itsenäisyyspäivä). Of these, Christmas and Midsummer are special in Finland because the actual festivities take place on eves, such as Christmas Eve[312][313] and Midsummer's Eve,[314][315] while Christmas Day and Midsummer's Day are more consecrated to rest. Other public holidays in Finland are New Year's Day, Epiphany, Good Friday, Easter Sunday and Easter Monday, Ascension Day, All Saints' Day and Saint Stephen's Day. All official holidays in Finland are established by Acts of Parliament.[316]

Sports
Main article: Sport in Finland
See also: Finland at the Olympics

Paavo Nurmi lights the 1952 Summer Olympics flame.
Various sporting events are popular in Finland. Pesäpallo, the Finnish equivalent of American baseball, is the national sport of Finland,[317][318] although the most popular sport in terms of spectators is ice hockey.[319] Other popular sports include athletics, cross-country skiing, ski jumping, football, volleyball, and basketball.[320] Association football is the most played team sport in terms of the number of players in the country.[321][322] Finland's national basketball team has received widespread public attention.[323]


Finland's men's national ice hockey team is ranked as one of the best in the world. The team has won four world championships (1995, 2011, 2019 and 2022) and one Olympic gold medal (2022).[324][325]
In terms of medals and gold medals won per capita, Finland is the best-performing country in Olympic history.[326] Finland first participated as a nation in its own right at the Olympic Games in 1908. At the 1912 Summer Olympics, three gold medals were won by the original "Flying Finn" Hannes Kolehmainen. In the 1920s and '30s, Finnish long-distance runners dominated the Olympics, with Paavo Nurmi winning a total of nine Olympic gold medals and setting 22 official world records between 1921 and 1931. Nurmi is often considered the greatest Finnish sportsman and one of the greatest athletes of all time. The 1952 Summer Olympics were held in Helsinki.

The javelin throw event has brought Finland nine Olympic gold medals, five world championships, five European championships, and 24 world records. Finland also has a notable history in figure skating. Finnish skaters have won 8 world championships and 13 junior world cups in synchronized skating.

Finnish competitors have achieved significant success in motorsport. In the World Rally Championship, Finland has produced eight world champions, more than any other country.[327] In Formula One, Finland has won the most world championships per capita, with Keke Rosberg, Mika Häkkinen and Kimi Räikkönen all having won the title.[328]

Some of the most popular recreational sports and activities include Nordic walking, running, cycling and skiing. Floorball is the most popular youth and workplace sport.[329][330]